HOLMES ANNIVERSARY VOLUME 



69. Notes upon some geometric earth- 

 works, with contour maps. American 

 Anthropologist, v, pp. 363-373, Washing- 

 ton, 1892. 



70. Modern quarry refuse and the pal- 

 aeolithic theory. Science, xx, pp. 295- 

 297, New York, 1892. [See No. 77.] 



71. Report on the department of Ameri- 

 can aboriginal pottery in the United 

 States National Museum. Annual Re- 

 port of the United States National Mu- 

 seum, 1892, p. 109, Washington, 1893. 



72. Distribution of stone implements in 

 the tidewater country. American An- 

 thropologist, VI, pp. 1-14, Washington, 

 1893. [Reprinted in the Archaeologist, 1, 

 pp. 41-50, Waterloo, Indiana, 1893.] 



73. Geographic nomenclature of the 

 District of Columbia. Ibid., pp. 29-53. 



J 893 74- [Review of] Pitt Rivers' Excava- 

 tions in Bokerly and Wansdyke, Dorset 

 andWilts. 1888-1891. With observations 

 on the human remains, by J. G. Garson. 

 Vol. III. [London] 1892. Ibid., p. 344. 



75. The World's Fair Congress of An- 

 thropology. Ibid., p. 423. 



76. Obituary of Charles Colcock Jones. 

 Ibid., pp. 457-458. 



77. Modern quarry refuse and the pal- 

 aeolithic theory. The Archaeologist, 1, pp. 

 21-27, Waterloo, Indiana, 1893. [Re- 

 print of No. 70.] 



78. Traces of glacial man in Ohio. Ibid., 

 pp. 161-170. [See No. 81.] 



79. Gravel man and palaeolithic culture; 

 a preliminary word. Science, xxi, pp. 

 29-30, New York, 1893. 



80. Are there traces of glacial man in 

 the Trenton gravels? Journal of Geology, 

 1. PP- 15-37. Chicago, 1893. 



81. Traces of glacial man in Ohio. Ibid., 

 pp. 147-163. [See No. 78.] 



82. Vestiges of early man in Minnesota. 

 American Geologist, xi, pp. 219-240, 

 Minneapolis, 1893. [See No. 89.] 



1894 83. An ancient quarry in Indian Terri- 

 tory. Bulletin zi, Bureau of American 

 Ethnology, Washington, 1894. 19 pp. 



84. Introductory note [to archeologic 

 investigations in James and Potomac 

 valleys, by Gerard Fowke]. Bulletin 23, 

 Bureau of American Ethnology, pp. 7-8, 

 Washington, 1894. 



85. Earthenware of Florida. Collections 

 of Clarence B. Moore. Journal of the 

 Academy of Natural Sciences of Philadel- 

 phia, 2d series, x, pp. 105-128, Phila- 

 delphia, 1894. 



86. Order of development of the primal 

 shaping arts. Proceedings of the Forty- 

 second Meeting of the American Associa- 

 tion for the Advancement of Science, Madi- 

 son, August, 1893, pp. 289-300, Salem, 

 1894. 



87. Natural history of flaked stone im- 

 plements. Memoirs of the International 

 Congress of Anthropology, pp. 120-139, 

 Chicago, 1894. 



88. Caribbean influence in the prehis- 

 toric art of Southern states. American 

 Anthropologist, vn, pp. 71-79, Washing- 

 ton, 1894. 



89. Vestiges of early man in Minnesota. 

 The Archceologist, n, pp. 65-79, Waterloo, 

 Indiana, 1894. [See No. 82.] 



1895 90. Archeological studies among the an- 

 cient cities of Mexico. Part 1 : Monu- 

 ments of Yucatan. Part 2: Monuments 

 of Chiapas, Oaxaca, and the valley of 

 Mexico. Publication of the Field Colum- 

 bian Museum, Anthropological series, 1, 

 338 pp., Chicago, 1 895-1 897. 



1896 91. Prehistoric textile art of eastern 

 United States. Thirteenth Annual Report 

 of the Bureau of Ethnology, 1891-92, pp. 

 3-46, Washington, 1896. 



1897 92. Stone implements of the Potomac- 

 Chesapeake tidewater province. Fif- 

 teenth Annual Report of the Bureau of 

 American Ethnology, 1893-94, pp. 13— 

 152, Washington, 1897. 



93. Preservation and decorative fea- 

 tures of Papuan crania. Publications of 

 the Field Columbian Museum, Anthropo- 

 logical series, 11, pp. 41-48, Chicago, 1897. 



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