NATIONAL GEOGRAPHIC MAGAZINE 



PRIZES OFFERED BY THE 



NATIONAL GEOGRAPHIC SOCIETY 



Issays on lorse Discoveries in Imerica. 



i. A first prize of $150 and a second prize of $75 are offered for the best 

 and second best essays, respectively, relating to pre-Columbian discoveries 

 and settlements of the Norsemen on the mainland of North America and the 

 location of the lands mentioned in the Icelandic Sagas. 



2. Essays submitted in competition for these prizes should be typewritten 



in the English language, and should not exceed 6,000 words in length ; they 



may be accompanied by maps and other illustrations used for the explanation 



of the text, but not for embellishment. 



i 

 ' 3. Essays submitted in competition for the prizes should be signed by a. 



pseudonym or number, and should bear no other indication of authorship, 



but each should be accompanied by a sealed envelope, marked with the same 



pseudonym or number, containing the name and address of the author. 



4. The competition will close at 6 p. m., December 31, 1899. 



5. The National Geographic Society and the judges on behalf thereof re- 

 serve the right to withhold either prize, or both, in case the essays submitted 

 are not sufficiently meritorious to warrant publication with the approval of 

 the Society; but in case of withholding one or both of the prizes on this 

 ground, a new competition will be opened. 



6. Immediately after the close of the competition the essays submitted in 

 accordance with the foregoing conditions will be laid before the following 

 board of judges, whose adjudication shall be final: 



Henry Gannett, 



Chief Geographer of the U. S. Geological Survey, etc. 

 Albert Bushneu, Hart, 



Professor of History in Harvard University. 

 Anita Newcomb McGee, M. D., 



Acting Assistant Surgeon, U. S. A. 



John Bach McMaster, LL. D., 



Professor of History in the University of Pennsylvania. 

 Henry S. Pritchett, 



Superintendent of the U. S. Coast and Geodetic Survey. 



107-108 Corcoran Building, Washington, D. C. 



