1881.] Anthropology. 403 
California, upon what he considers, with a question, Quercus hindsu. 
Our first specimens of this gall were received some ten years ago 
from Sonoma county, the oak not being determined, but we subse- 
quently received specimens from San Mateo, Cal., from Dr. L. D. 
Morse, who is quite a good botanist, and who determined the oak 
as Quercus douglasit, Ne exhibited specimens of the gall to Mr. 
Bassett in 1871, and also presented some to Mr. Albert Miiller, of 
Basle (then of England), who refers to it under our MSS. name of 
Quercus-californica in the Proceedings of the London Entomo- 
logical Society for 1872, p. 32 : 
Aside from the various parasites which prey upon the Cynips, 
__we have always found these galls to be infested with the beetle’ 
above mentioned. Mr. Miller gives an account of his observa- 
tions on the habits of this insect, showing that it agrees therein with 
Anobium. We would further remark that the beetle breeds in the 
dry galls and still continues its work in galls that have been in 
our cabinet over five years. 
ANTHROPOLOGY.’ 
terior in the north, reaching down to the seaboard at Cook's 
inlet and the mouth of Copper river 
total of population is: whites, 392; Creoles, 1683; Aleuts, 2214; 
Innuits of Kodiak, 2196, of Togiak, 1826, of Bristol bay 2099, of 
Kuskokvim, 3505, of Yukon, 3359, of Behring sea, 1533, of the 
OS setgerag cornutum Lec., Proc. Phila. Acad., 1859, p. 37- Subsequently made 
< of a new genus, Ozsognathus, ibid., 1865, p. 226. 
. Biited by Prof. Orts T. MAson, Columbian College, Washington, D. c. 
