SEVENTY-FIRST ANNUAL REPORT 17 



196412. Miscellaneous bones of 7 species of mammals from Sapeloe Island, Ga., 

 carbon-14 determined age about 3,800 years. Through Dr. A. J. 

 Waring. 



199026, 201160. One snake, 1 gecko, 3 grasshoppers, and 6 marine moUusks from 

 Taboga Island, Panama Bay, collected by Dr. M. W. Stirling, 1953. 



FROM RIVER BASIN SURVEYS 



199132. Eighteen archeological specimens from 4 sites in Albeni Falls Reser- 



voir area. Fend Oreille River, Bonner Co., Idaho. Collected by Joel L. 

 Shiner, 1952. 



199133. Ninety archeological specimens from 2 sites in Cachuma Reservoir area 



on Santa Ynez River, Santa Barbara Co., Calif. Collected by Albert 

 D. Mohr, 1952. 



199134. 650 archeological specimens from Site 45 BN 3, McNary Reservoir, Co- 



lumbia River, Benton Co., Wash. Collected by Dr. Douglas Osborne, 



1948. 

 199267. Two bird bones from North-South Dakota area. Through Robert L. 



Stephenson. 

 199210, 200377. Thirty fresh-water mussels from archeological sites in the Mis- 

 souri Basin. Through Robert L. Stephenson. 

 199430. Fifty-seven Oligocene fossil mammal specimens from Canyon Ferry 



Reservoir area in Montana, collected by Dr. Theodore E. White, June 



1953. 

 200125. Pottery, stone, bone, and shell artifacts and human skeletal material 



from the Woodruff Ossuary, Phillips Co., Kans. Collected by Marvin 

 L. Kivett, 1946. 



MISCELLANEOUS 



Dr. Frances Densmore, Dr. John K. Swanton, Dr. Antonio J. War- 

 ing, Jr., and Ealph S. Solecki continued as collaborators of the Bureau 

 of American Ethnology. 



On April 30, 1954, Dr. John P. Harrington retired after 39 years' 

 service as ethnologist on the staff of the Bureau. Upon his retire- 

 ment he was appointed research associate of the Smithsonian Institu- 

 tion and will continue his linguistic studies in that capacity. 



Information was furnished during the past year by members of 

 the Bureau staff in reply to numerous inquiries concerning the Amer- 

 ican Indians, past and present, of both continents. The increased 

 number of requests from teachers, particularly from primary and 

 secondary grades, from Scout organizations, and from the general 

 public, indicates a rapidly growing interest in the American Indian. 

 Various specimens sent to the Bureau were identified and data on them 

 furnished for their owners. 



Eespectf ully submitted. 



M. W. Stirling, Director. 



Dr. Leonard Carmichael, 

 Secretary^ Smithsonian Institution, 



