920 General Notes. [ November, 
———Animal myths of the Iroquois. 
Morse, Edw. S. (Salem, Mass.)—On the ancient Japanese bronze bells. 
On worked shells in New England Shell-heaps. 
Langdon, Frank W. (Cincinnati, O.)—The temporal process of the malar bone in 
he ancient human crania from Madisonville, Ohio. 
Peet, Stephen D. (Clinton, Wis.)—The emblematic mounds on the four lakes of - 
Wisconsin. 
Buffalo drives on the Rock river in Wisconsin. ‘ 
De Haas, Wills (Washington, D. C.)—The Mound-Builders; an inquiry into their 
assumed southern origin. 
The greatest attraction, however, to the anthropologists, was © 
an excursion by train to Madisonville, a few miles north of Cin- 
cinnati. The readers of the Naturatist had been.told so much 
concerning this wonderful Jocality, that about three hundred per- 
sons went to the ground to examine for themselves. There, in 
brief, they witnessed what a few determined gentlemen can do 
with limited resources. Ona long tongue of land, bounded on 
all sides but one by deep and precipitous ravines, is the ancient 
cemetery. Beginning at the top end of the bench, the explorers 
have excavated about two acres to a depth of six feet, throwing 
But into the great his pupils throw themselves, and the g° 
work goes on. The July pothbt of Revue d’ Anthropologie, after 
an opening article by Dr. Broca, passes on to give us the pegpt 
tomed rich and varied feast, the list of whose good things 
be found below: 
Broca, Pau!—La Torsion de l’Humérus et le tropométre, 386-425. 
_ Betz, Wladimir (Professor a ?Universitié de Kiew)—Sur la structure 
*  ¢€rebrale, A la Mémoire de Paul Broca, ; 
de Vécorce 
