HOLMES ANNIVERSARY VOLUME 



20. Examples of iconoclasm by the con- 

 querors of Mexico. American Natural- 

 ist, xix, pp. 1031-1037, Philadelphia, 



1885. 



21. Evidences of the antiquity of man 

 on the site of the City of Mexico. Trans- 

 actions of the Anthropological Society of 

 Washington, in, pp. 68-81, Washington, 

 1885. 



22. Origin and development of form and 

 ornament in ceramic art. [Abstract.] 

 Ibid., pp. 112-114. [See No. 30.] 



23. [Quoted on] The glaciers in the 

 Rocky mountains. Fifth Annual Report 

 of the United Stales Geological Survey, 

 1883-84, pp. 344-347. Washington, 1885. 



1886 24. The trade in spurious Mexican anti- 

 quities. Science, vn, pp. 170-172, 264, 

 New York, 1886. 



25. Sketch of the great Serpent mound. 

 Ibid., vin, pp. 624-628, New York, 1886. 



26. Textile art in prehistoric archaeol- 

 ogy. American Antiquarian, vin, pp. 

 261-266, Chicago, 1886. 



27. Report on the section of American 

 prehistoric pottery in the United States 

 National M useum. A nnual Report of the 

 United States National Museum, 188$, 

 pt. 2, p. 69, Washington, 1886. 



28. Pottery of the ancient Pueblos. 

 Fourth Annual Report of the Bureau of 

 Ethnology, 1882-83, pp. 257-360, Wash- 

 ington, 1886. 



29. Ancient pottery of the Mississippi 

 valley. Ibid., pp. 361-436. 



30. Origin and development of form and 

 ornament in ceramic art. Ibid., pp. 437- 

 465- 



31. Ancient pottery of the Mississippi 

 valley. Proceedings of the Davenport 

 Academy of Natural Sciences, 1882-84, 

 iv, pp. 123-196, Davenport, Iowa, 1886. 



1887 32. The use of gold and other metals 

 among the ancient inhabitants of Chi- 

 riqui, Isthmus of Darien. Bulletin 3, 

 Bureau of Ethnology, Washington, 1887- 

 27 pp. 



1888 33. Ancient art of the province of Chi- 

 riqui, Colombia. Sixth Annual Report 

 of the Bureau of Ethnology, 1884-85, pp. 

 13-187, Washington, 1888. 



34. A study of the textile art in its rela- 

 tion to the development of form and 

 ornament. Ibid., pp. 189-252. 



35. Report [of the Geologist-in-charge] 

 to the Director of the United States 

 Geological Survey, 1885-86. Seventh 

 Annual Report of the United States Geo- 

 logical Survey, 1885-86, pp. 136-137. 

 Washington, 1888. 



36. Use of gold and other metals in an- 

 cient Chiriqui. Jewelers' Circular and 

 Horological Review, xix, pp. 34; 37-38; 

 65-68; 88; 91-92, New York, 1888. 



1889 37. Textile fabrics of ancient Peru, 

 Bulletin 7, Bureau of Ethnology, Wash- 

 ington, 1889. 17 pp. 



38. Report [of the Geologist-in-charge] 

 to the Director of the United States Geo- 

 logical Survey, 1886-87. Eighth Annual 

 Report of the United States Geological Sur- 

 vey, 1886-87, pt. 1, pp. 202-203, Wash- 

 ington, 1889. 



39. Report [of the Geologist-in-charge] 

 to the Director of the United States Geo- 

 logical Survey, 1887-88. Ninth Annual 

 Report of the United States Geological Sur- 

 vey, 1887-88, pp. 143-144, Washington, 

 1889. 



40. On some spurious Mexican an- 

 tiquities and their relation to ancient 

 art. Annual Report of the Smithsonian 

 Institution, 1886, pt. 1, pp. 319-334. 

 Washington, 1889. 



41. [Review of] Pitt Rivers' Excava- 

 tions in Cranborne Chase, near Rush- 

 more, on the borders of Dorset and 

 Wilts, 1880-88. Vol. 11. Printed pri- 

 vately, 1888. American Anthropologist, 

 II, p. 172, Washington, 1889. 



42. Pottery of the Potomac tide- water 

 region. Ibid., pp. 246-252. 



43. Debasement of Pueblo art. Ibid., 

 p. 320. 



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