HOLMES ANNIVERSARY VOLUME 



117. Report on the department of an- 

 thropology for the year 1899-1900. An- 

 nual Report of the United States National 

 Museum, igoo, pp. 21-29, Washington, 

 1902. 



118. Anthropological studies in Cali- 

 fornia. Ibid., pp. 155-187. 



1903 119. Aboriginal pottery of the eastern 

 United States. Twentieth Annual Report 

 of the Bureau of American Ethnology, 

 1898-1899, pp. 1-201, Washington, 1903. 



120. Report on the department of an- 

 thropology for the year 1900-1901. An- 

 nual Report of the United States National 

 Museum, 1901, pp. 51-61, Washington, 

 1903. 



121. The exhibit of the department of 

 anthropology. Ibid., pp. 200-218. 



122. Report on the exhibit of the United 

 States National Museum at the Pan- 

 American Exposition, Buffalo, New 

 York, 1901. By F. W. True, W. H. 

 Holmes, and G. P. Merrill. Ibid., pp. 

 177-231. 



123. Flint implements and fossil re- 

 mains from a sulphur spring at Afton, 

 Indian Territory. Ibid., pp. 237-252. 

 [See No. no.] 



124. Classification and arrangement of 

 the exhibits of an anthropological mu- 

 seum. Ibid., pp. 253-278. [See No. 115.] 



125. Fossil human remains found near 

 Lansing, Kansas. Annual Report of the 

 Smithsonian Institution, 1902, pp. 455- 

 462, Washington, 1903. [See No. 114.] 



126. Traces of aboriginal operations in 

 an iron mine near Leslie, Missouri. 

 American Anthropologist, n. s., v, pp. 

 503-5071 Lancaster, Pa., 1903. [See No. 

 130-] 



127. Shell ornaments from Kentucky 

 and Mexico. Smithsonian Miscellaneous 

 Collections, vol. xlv (Quarterly Issue, 

 vol. 1), pp. 97-99, Washington, 1903. 

 [Reprinted in Scientific American Sup- 

 plement, Lvm, p. 23828, New York, 

 1904.] 



1904 128. Report on the department of an- 

 thropology for the year 1901-1902. 

 Annual Report of the United States Na- 

 tional Museum, 1902, pp. 53-58, Wash- 

 ington, 1904. 



129. Report of the [Chief of the] Bureau 

 of American Ethnology to the Secretary 

 of the Smithsonian Institution [for the 

 fiscal year ending June 30, 1903]. An- 

 nual Report of the Smithsonian Institution, 

 1903, pp. 34-48, Washington, 1904. 



130. Traces of aboriginal operations in 

 an iron mine near Leslie, Mo. Ibid. 

 pp. 723-726. [See No. 126.] 



131. The exhibits of the Smithsonian 

 Institution in the Government Building 

 [at the St. Louis Exposition]. American 

 Anthropologist, n. s., vl, p. 754, Lancaster, 

 Pa., 1904. 



132. [Letter as Chief of the Bureau of 

 American Ethnology, dated Washing- 

 ton, November 19, 1904, addressed to 

 Edgar L. Hewett, respecting the preser- 

 vation of antiquities.] In Hewett, Edgar 

 L., Circular Relating to Historic and Pre- 

 historic Ruins, p. 16, Washington, 1904. 

 Also in Hewett, Edgar L., Government 

 Supervision of Historic and Prehistoric 

 Ruins, pp. io-n of reprint, New York, 

 1904. 



T 9°5 133- Report of the [Chief of the] Bureau 

 of American Ethnology to the Secretary 

 of the Smithsonian Institution [for the 

 fiscal year ending June 30, 1904]. An- 

 nual Report of the Smithsonian Institu- 

 tion, 1904, pp. 46-54, Washington, 1905. 



134. Report on the Congress of Ameri- 

 canists held at Stuttgart, Germany, Au- 

 gust 18-23, 1904. Smithsonian Miscel- 

 laneous Collections, xlvii (Quarterly Is- 

 sue, vol. n), pp. 391-395, Washington, 

 1905. 



135. Contributions of American arche- 

 ology to human history. Ibid., pp. 412- 

 420. Published also in Annual Report of 

 the Smithsonian Institution, 1904, pp. 

 551-558, Washington, 1905. 



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