182 General Notes. [ March. 
Ko-man!'-tsu, Comanches. 
Pan-ai'-ti, Bannacks. 
Pa-vi-o'-tso, Pah-Utes, or Pai Utes of Western Nevada. 
Dialect: Pan!-a-mint. 
Go-si-ute (of Nevada and Utah). 
U'-ta-ats, Utes. 
Dialects: Mu-a!-tsu (Southern California, Northern Mexico.) 
Kai-vav'-it (Pai-Utes of Northern Oregon.) 
Nu-a'-gun-tit (Pai-Utes of Southern Nevada.) 
Tan!-ta-waits, or Chemehuevis. 
Shi'-nu-mo. In six (of the seven). Pueblos in Tusayan, or Moqui, 
Northern Arizona. 
A full account of the International Congress at Buda-Pesth will be 
found in Nos. 10 and 11 of the Matériaux. The principal part of the 
discussions referred to the relation between the stone and the metal age 
of Hungary and of the rest of Europe. Especial notice was taken of 
the abundance of copper articles found in Hungary. 
The year just past has been rich in its gifts to classical archeology. 
The discoveries and published accounts of Wood at Ephesus, di Cesnola 
at Cyprus, Schliemann at Mycenæ, Parker at Rome, and the German 
explorers at Olympus are especially noticeable. Mr. Wood’s results are 
published in Discoveries at Ephesus; Longmans & Co., 1877. Di Ces- 
nola’s latest rich harvest of gems, of jewelry and ornaments of gold, silver; 
and bronze, and of fictile ware, found at Kourium, on the south side of 
Cyprus, has been purchased for the Metropolitan Museum of Art, for the 
sum of $66,000. The Academy speaks disparagingly of our archeological 
students, but, no doubt, these treasures will stir up some fresh enthu- 
siasm. Dr. Schliemann, in his excavations at Mycene, claims to have 
fallen on the tomb of Agamemnon. At least the treasure-trove proves 
his last discovery to be the most lucky of all, and promises to add to our 
knowledge of a period previously illustrated only by a few specimens m 
the British Museum. The fruits of the excavations at Rome may be 
gathered from two publications by Mr. John Murray for Mr. J. p 
Parker, The Flavian Amphitheatre and Historical Construction of Walls 
in Rome and from The Catacombs of Rome, etc., by the Rev. W. H. 
Withrow: Hodder and Stoughton. i 
Abbé Ducrost and M. Arcelin have just finished the exploration of 
the detritus at the foot of the cliff at Solutré, and have found it to consist 
of five zones. The first, or lowest, rests on the lias and exhibits bones 
of extinct animals and flint flakes accumulated at points, forming kitchen- 
middings. The second zone contains bones of the horse, in such pere 
bers that the individuals may be counted by hundreds of RE . 
The third zone is nearly sterile. The fourth zone commences the e 
of the reindeer” proper, with the refuse of cooking, and eee? 7 
dwellings, in great abundance. Here the horse and the reindeer pre- 
dominate. The fifth zone is made up of modern débris. The authors 
