160 Miscellaneous Bibliography. 
when ne are grown me the aoe district. 
H 
ook hist ronal at once the eekakieg. on wine and wine 
sans and cannot fail to add to the already excellent reputation 
of its authors. The wood-cuts are superior, the letter-press is ele- 
gant, and the binding is superb. Mechanically the book is all 
that could be desired. 
2 eet we the Anthropological Institute of New York. 
Vol. I, w York, 1871, “sae Westermann & Co), 
; Sq.) 
Vice-Presidents. This sie ceabe of its publ stoti contains 
several valuable original papers, besides a translation of the ad- 
dress of Dr."M. Paul Broca, before the Anthropological Society of 
sheen on the progress of Anthropology. These papers are entitled 
von Ma on some points of South American ethnology, by & 
dear representing silver gee wooden idols, ete., by & 
G. Squier; Sculptured rocks, Belmont Co., Ohio, with fi 
slabs with human and other footprints, by J. W. Ward; Canoe 
Savannah river Swamp, by C. C. Jones, jr. Trepanning among the 
Incas, with a figure of the trepanned skull, by J. C. Nott; the 
Arch in bbe: be by E.G. Squier Progen = ace ete., bY 
parallel with Mathematics as a Science of Method. Biology 8 
discussed from a physical, a physiological, a ae . 
eo and a spiritual oint of view. 
Reon are issued by th of the Yao nt of the Interior, as part of : 
9 a on the U. 8. Geological Survey of the Territories, under se 
Hayden. They present the features of one of the most 
ni hrs regions on the — ent. The positions of all the numer 
