214 



Anthropology 



DEPARTMENT OF COMPARATIVE 



ANATOMY 



BY Gift 



New York Zoological Society, New 



York City. 



3 Virginia Opossums. 



DEPARTMENT OF ANTHRO- 

 POLOGY 

 By Gifi 

 Hon. Recaredo Amengual N., Inten- 

 dente de Tarapaca, Chile. 

 Ethnological collection : mummies, 

 pottery, blankets, musical instru- 

 ments, etc., from Pica, Chile. 

 Dr. R. W. Amidon, Chaumont, N. Y. 

 Cranial bones, from Point Peninsula, 

 N. Y. 

 Benjamin Walworth Arnold, Albany, 

 N. Y. 

 Prehistoric terra cotta reproduction 

 — perhaps a deer's foot, from Te- 

 pisclan, Mexico. 

 Mr. and Mrs. William M. Baldwin, 

 New York City. 

 Feather headdress, skin apron, woven 

 belt, neck-scarf feathers, and 3 

 feather ornaments, from tribe liv- 

 ing in western Paraguay. 

 Bernice Pauahi Bishop Museum, 

 Honolulu, H. I. 

 Large plaster figure, busts, and skele- 

 tal material. 

 Nelson Blount. 

 2 Obsidian arrowheads, from Litch- 

 field Co., Conn. 

 Professor Franz Boas, New York City. 



Pottery vessel, from New Mexico. 

 The Late Dr. E. A. Bogue, (through 

 Miss Holmes, New York City). 

 Casts of jaws and teeth of 1,100 white 

 persons ; also collection of lantern 

 slides made from same. 

 L'Abbe Breuil, Paris, France. 

 2 Paleolithic flint implements and 1 

 horn of Saiga antelope, from Pla- 

 card Cave, Charente, France. 

 Barnum Brown. 

 Miscellaneous archaeological material: 

 1 paleolithic flint; 5 plain pottery 

 vessels (Roman) ; 5 lamps (Ro- 

 man) ; fragments of vessel of Gallic 

 type ; fragments of limestone, 

 carved and painted ; fragments of 

 vessel (Turkish origin) ; fragments 

 of mummy cloth and painted mum- 

 my cover ; from Egypt. 



M. Bunny, New Rochelle, N. Y. 



Tapa cloth, from South Sea Islands. 

 J. Jijon y Caamano, Quito, Ecuador. 



2 pieces of Ecuador cotton: 1 speci- 

 men from Santa Rosa, Province of 

 El Oro; 1 specimen from Portovelo, 

 near Zaruma, Province of El Oro, 

 altitude 2,200 feet. 



The Late Henry A. Cassebeer 

 (through Remsen Williams), Long 

 Island City, N. Y. 

 57 Ethnological specimens, from Af- 

 rica, Mexico, Philippine Islands, 

 South America, New Mexico, 

 China, Japan, South Seas, Norway, 

 Russia, and Germany. 



W. E. Chapman, Sinaloa, Mexico. 

 5 Pictures of Mexican petroglyphs. 



Frederick H. Chase, New York City. 

 Skin canoe, child's ivory top, ivory 

 mallet, ivory and whalebone knife, 

 1 pair of baby mucklucks, 2 walrus 

 teeth, 2 ivory pointed arrows, 1 ivory 

 buck-saw, 1 pair miniature snow- 

 shoes, from Nome; beaded poke or 

 gold sack, from Koyokuk River; 

 scabbard for hunting-knife, beaded 

 stand-cover, Tanana River; rifle 

 case, from Ketchumstock ; large 

 poke or gold sack, from Fort 

 Yukon, Alaska. 



H. R. H. Chow Chom Erp, Bangkok, 

 Siam. (Through Dr. L. C. Bulkley.) 

 Silver embroidered sash worn by 

 Siamese nobility at royal Ceremo- 

 nies. 



Alexander C. Coldrup, New York City. 

 Wooden image, from Senegal, West 

 Africa. 



W. P. Costello, Camaguey, Cuba. 

 9 Pebbles and 2 strings of beads 

 called witch medicine, and used by 

 the Negroes, from Cuba. 



Dr. Henry E. Crampton, New York 

 City. 

 14 Pieces of batik cloth showing the 

 different stages in the process of 

 making, from the Island of Java. 



The Late Captain Frank P. Crockett 

 (through Miss Esther M. Crockett, 

 Brooklyn, N. Y.). 

 Ethnological specimens consisting of 

 shields, musical instruments, cos- 

 tumes, girdles, etc., from Africa. 



F. B. Crowninshield, Boston, Mass. 



3 Indian skulls and 3 potsherds, from 

 Florida. 



