270 PROCEEDINGS OF THE CANADIAN INSTITUTE. 



Wrangell,^ Prichard,^ Steller,^ Crantz,* Liitke,^ Morton,* McDonald,' 

 Mitchell,^ Sir Daniel Wilson,^ Fontaine,'^' Palmer," Dawson,'- Figuier,'^ 

 Ujfalvy de Mezokovezd,'* Peschel,'^ Petitob,'« Petrotf," Dr. John Kae,'* 

 Nadaillac,'" Prof. Flowers,"-'" Elliot,-' Topinard,^-' and many others. 

 Du Ponceau and Gallatin'-^ note resemblance between the Red 

 Indian and the Eskimo, which view is also shared by Prichard,-'^ 

 Dr. Latham,^* on account of physical resemblances ally them with 

 the Asiatic Mongols, but at the same time note a certain likeness 

 in language to the American Indians. On the other hand some 

 later writers have concluded that the Eskimo are American 

 aborigines. This is the view taken by Dr. Robt. Brown. -'' Dr. Rink,-' 

 the eminent Danish scholar, has expressed the opinion that " the 

 Eskimo appear to have been the last wave of an aboriginal American 

 race which has spread over the continent from the more genial 

 regions following principally the rivers and water-courses, and con- 

 tinually yielding to the pressure of the tribes behind them, until at 

 last they have peopled the sea-coast." W. H. Dall,"* Dr C. C. 



]. Kefd. to in Peschel. loc. cit. 



"2. Researches vol. iv., p. 463. 



3. Kamtschatka, refd. to in Peschel, loc. cit. 



4. Historie von Greenland. 



5. Voy. Autour du Monde, vol. 2, p. "209. 



fi. Quoted in Norman's Rambles in Yucatan, p. 251, Gran. Am., p. 2H0. 



7. Narrative of some Passages in the Life History of Eenoolooapek, Edinb. 1841, p. IS. 



8. Archaeolog. Americana, vol. i., p. 344. 



9. Prehistoric Man, 1. Ed., p. 384, and V. Pres. Ad. Am. .\ss., Mont, 1882, p. 541. Preh Man, 



Vol. ii., p. 447, Ed. 1802. 

 1(1. How the Earth was Peopled, p. '244. 



11. Miy-ration from Shinar, 1ST9, p. 95. 



12. Fossil .Men, p. 279. 



13. The Human Race, Eng. Ed., p. 460. 



14. Melanges Altaiques, p. 153. 



15. Viilkerkunde, S. 396. 



16. Vocab. Frang.-Esq., 1876, p. xxx. 



17. Amer. Naturalist, xxi, p. .567-75. 



18. Journ. Anthrop. Inst., Nov., 1886, p. 200. 



19. Prehistoric America, p. 52-i. 



20. Journ. Anthr. Inst , Nov., 1886, p. 2(:0. 



21. Our Arctic Province, Alaska and the Seal Islands, 1886. 



22. Anthropolojde 2e. ed., Paris, 1877, p. 488, cf. W. H. Gilder, Schwatka's Search, 1881, p. 299. 



23. Arch. Am., Vol. ii., p. 211. Refd. to also in Chamber's Encyc. 



24. Cham. Ency. Article, Esquim. -loc. cit. 



25. Phil. Soc. Lond. Journ. Vol. I. (1848), p. 154-166. 



26. Races of Mankind Vol. I. 



27. On Eskimo Descent. Journ. Anthrop. Inst. iii. p. 104 ; Danish Greenld. 1877, p. 405, Esk. 



Tales and Trad. p. 11. 



28. Tribes of Extreme N. West, Contrib. to Am. Ethn. Vol. i. 102. 



