1878. | ' Anthropology. 483 
The remarks of Mr. Powers upon these dialects, both in the 
introduction and throughout the volume add greatly to the value 
of this linguistic material. The following table will give some 
idea of the contents of the work and of the accompanying voca- 
bularies. 
. LINGUISTIC Stocks : 
1 Tinneh, Chapters VI.—IX., XI., XIII. 
2 Yurok. s IV. and V. Vocabularies page 460. 
3 Karok. " ks © aon 8 8 $ ai 447- 
4 Chimariko. No description. Re a 474- 
5 Wishosk. Chapters X., and XI. a3 p 478. 
6 Yuki. Ml Va XV and XXL “ gh: 
7 Pomo, " VI.—XX. and XXII. n s 491. 
8 Wintun, "e XXHL—XXVv. 2 “516; 
9 Shasta aE RVI. ss 1 Oey: 
Io M $ a XANH., i none 
11 Achomawi. it RAVIL Core ee 
12 Maidu. u > EXX XXX > Some 
13 Mutsun. “o XXXI n E 
14 Yokuts. RSS. s X 570. 
' I5 San Antonio. No description. P “568. 
16 Santa Barbara. “ . A ve 560. 
17 Washo. Located on Linguistic Map. 
18 Shoshoni. “ s je 
19 Yuma. “ce “ec éé 
Accompanying the volume is an excellent colored map pre- 
pared under the immediate supervision of Major Powell, and 
locating each of the nineteen stocks as nearly as it can be done, 
considering the fickleness and migratory habits of the Indians and 
the crowding of the white settlers. 
h 
the works of Padre F. Pareja, in the Library of the N. Y. His- 
torical Society. In one of the volumes Mr. Gatschet found a 
loose sheet of paper on which a Mexican had carefully tran- 
scribed the Lord’s Prayer from a volume entitled “ Explicacion — 
de la ‘ Doctrina’ que compusó el Cardinal Belarmino por man- ` 
dado del Señor Papa Clemente VIII. Traduida en lengua Flori- ° 
dana por el Padre Fr. Gerorio Muoilla, &c., &c., Mexico, 1635.” 
No. 318 of the Smithsonian Publications is an illustrated quarto 
brochure of 35 pages and 10 plates, entitled “On the Remains 
of Later Prehistoric Man obtained from the caves in the Catherina 
Archipelago, Alaska Territory, and especially from the caves of 
t by W. H. Dall. In the first part of the 
, or typical Eskimo tribes, and the Aleüts, or Aleu- 
tian Islanders. He then refers to the burial customs of the latter, 
especially at the time of their first discovery by the Russians. 
he chief attraction of the contribution is the illustrated descrip- 
tion of the collection of mummies or desiccated bodies from a 
VOL. XIL—NO. VII. 34° 
