BIBLIOGRAPHY OF THE U. S. NATIONAL MUSEUM, 1890. 699 



S. R. Koehler. Callot's Grosse Miseres de la Guerre. 



Chronikfiirvervielfdltigende Kunst, II, No. 11, November, 1889, p}>. 81-86. 

 A descriptive list of the editions and copies of the series of etchings named in the title. 

 S. R. Koehler. Umrisse zu Goethe's "Faust" vou Rftsch. 

 Chronikfur vervielfiiltigende Kunst, III, No. 5, May, 1890, p. 38. 



A short communication concerning an edition of the series named, dated 1816, and not men- 

 tioned in any of the handbooks. 

 S. R. Koehler. Frederick Jueugling. 



Privately printed, New Tork, 1890, without date or place of publication. 



Small 4°, 12 pp.; in paper covers. 



Printed in part also as an introduction to the catalogue of the auction of Juengling's works, 



held in New York City, March 3, 1890. 

 Biographical sketch of Frederick Juengliug, the wood-engraver (bom, Leipsic, October 18, 

 1846; died, New York, December 31, 1889), with some consideration of the part played by 

 him in the development of " the new school. " 

 George F. Kunz. Gem collection of the U. S. National Museum. 



Report of the Smithsonian Institution. II, 1886 (1889), pp. 267-275. 

 Edwin Linton. Notes on Eutozoa of marine fishes of New England, with descrip- 

 tions of several new species. 



Annual Report of the U. S Commissioner of Fish and Fisheries, Part xiv, 1886 (1889), pp. 453- 



511. 6 plates. 

 Studies made from the IT. S. Commis.-iion of Fish and Fisheries, the material being chiefly ob- 

 tained in the vicinity of Wood's Holl, Massachusetts. Sixteen species are described and 

 figured : Genera — Spongiobolhrium, Crossobothrium, Phoreiobothrium; species— Dibothrium 

 manubriforme, D.aluteros, Spongiabothrium variabilc, Phyllobothrium thysanocephalum- 

 Orygmatobothrium angustum, Crossobothrium lacinialum, Phoreiobothrium lamtm, Rhyn- 

 chobothriu.nl bisulcatwm, 1'oenia dilatata, and Echinorynehus sagittifer. 

 Leverett M. Loomis. The raven as a South Carolinian. 



The Auk, VI, No. 3, July, 1889, pp. 277-278. 

 Frederic A. Lucas. The great auk in the U. S. National Museum. 

 The Auk, vn, No. 2, April, i890, pp. 203-204. 

 (See under Leonhard Stejneger.) 

 George Marx. Catalogue of the described Arancea of temperate North America. 



Proc. 77. S. Nat. Mus., XII, No. 782, 1889, pp. 497-594. 

 Otis T. Mason. Cradles of the American tiborigines. 

 Report of the Smithsonian Institution, 1837, II, pp. 161-235. 



This paper is au illustrated description of the methods employed by American aborigines to 

 hold and to transport their babes. The special motive is to enable the biological student 

 to examine into the causes of deformity seen in most Indian skulls. 

 Otis T. Mason. How to straighten a spear shaft. 

 The American Anthropologist, II, p. 158. 



Among some South American tribes this is performed by means of weights. 

 Otis T. Mason. Music in Honduras. 

 The American Anthropologist, II, p. 158. 



The music of Central America is now of a composite character, partly native, partly African, 

 and partly European. 

 Otis T. Mason. The aborigines of the District of Columbia and the Lower Potomac. 

 The AmericoM Anthropologist, II, pp. 225-268. 



The introduction is by Professor Mason, and tho following contributions are also included : 

 The geologic antecedents of man in tho Potomac Valley, by W J McGee. 

 The paleolithic period in the District of Columbia, by Thomas Wilson. 



Ancient village sites and aboriginal workshops in the District of Columbia, by S. V. Proudfit. 

 Pottery of the Potomac tidewater region, by W. H. Holmes. 

 Shell mounds of the Potomac and Wicomico, by Elmer R. Reynolds. 

 Indian tribes of the District of Columbia, by James Mooney. 

 Discussion, by F. W. Putnam. 



(This symposium was called forth by the requirements of the Anthropological Society of 

 Washington, the constitution calling upon the vice-president to organize special work in 

 their several departments.) 

 Otis T. Mason. The archeology of the Potomac tidewater region. 

 Proc. TJ. S. Nat. Mus. XII, March 7, 1890, pp. 367-37C. 



In this region are old campsites, workshops, soapstone quarries, shell heaps, and finds of rude 

 forms of wrought stone, believed by some to be paleolithic, by others to be unfinished 

 objects. 



