Publications 115 



The publications of The American Museum of Natural 

 History for the year have been the Annual Report, the Bulle- 

 tin, the Anthropological Papers, Natural History 

 Publications _j ournal of The American Museum of Natural 



History, the Guide Leaflet and the Handbook. 



The Bulletin is devoted to the publication of the results of 

 field and laboratory work. It consists of about twenty articles 

 issued at irregular intervals throughout the year. During 1920, 

 Volume XLII was published, which contains seventeen ar- 

 ticles : one on mammalogy, two on ichthyology, ten on inverte- 

 brate zoology, one on herpetology, two on comparative 

 anatomy, and one on invertebrate palaeontology. Volume 

 XLIII, which consists of seven articles on the invertebrate 

 zoology of the Belgian Congo, was also published. The total 

 pages for the year are 1,110, with 386 text figures and 53 

 plates. 



The Anthropological Papers are the organ of the Museum's 

 Department of Anthropology and are now in their twenty-sixth 

 volume. The eight parts which appeared during 1920 include 

 articles on the San Carlos Apache, Crow, Sarsi, Cree, Ojibway, 

 Canadian Dakota, Sisseton Dakota, Shoshoni, Ute, Hidatsa and 

 White Mountain Apache tribes. With the publication of their 

 Title-page and Indices, Volumes XII, XIV and XVII have 

 been completed. The total number of pages is 918, with 45 

 text figures and 1 map. 



Natural History, which has just completed its twentieth 

 volume, has been made a bi-monthly publication. 



A new edition of Handbook No. 1, "North American Indians 

 of the Plains," has been issued, also of Handbook No. 4, 

 "Animals of the Past." There have also been new edi- 

 tions of the General Guide and of Guide Leaflets Nos. 

 38 and 39. The following reprint appeared: "Deep Sea 

 Fishes," by Dr. Louis Hussakof . "A First Chapter in Natural 

 History," by Dr. F. A. Lucas, was reissued as Guide Leaflet 

 No. 51. "An Hour in the Museum," which takes the place 

 of the former Key, gives, as the title implies, a schedule which 

 enables the hurried visitor to see all the most interesting and 

 important exhibits in an hour's tour. 



