32 BUREAU OF AMERICAN ETHNOLOGY 



The various cooperating organizations send progress and completed 

 reports to the River Basin Surveys so that the results of their work 

 may be coordinated with those for the over-all program. In this way 

 the information obtained by them becomes a part of the general 

 record of the River Basin Surveys. 



EDITORIAL WORK AND PUBLICATIONS 



There were issued one Annual Report and two PubHcations of the 

 Institute of Social Anthropology as listed below: 



Sixty-fifth Annual Report of the Bureau of American Ethnology^ 1947-1948. 

 32 pp. 



Institute of Social Anthropology Publ. No. 8. Sierra Popoluca speech, by 

 Mary L. Foster and George M. Foster. 45 pp. 



Institute of Social Anthropology Publ. No. 9. The Terena and the Caduveo 

 of southern Mato Grosso, Brazil, by Kalervo Oberg. 72 pp., 24 pis., 4 maps, 

 2 charts. 



The following publications were in press at the close of the fiscal 

 year: 



Bulletin 143. Handbook of South American Indians. Julian H. Steward 

 editor. Volume 5, The comparative ethnology of South American Indians. 

 Volume 6, Physical anthropology, linguistics, and cultural geography of South 

 American Indians. 



Miscellaneous publications. List of publications of the Bureau of American 

 Ethnology, with index to authors and titles. Revised to July 30, 1949. 



Bulletin 144. The Northern and Central Nootkan tribes, by Philip Drucker. 



Institute of Social Anthropology Publ. No. 10. Nomads of the long bow: The 

 Siriono of eastern Brazil, by Allan R. Holmberg. 



Institute of Social Anthropology Publ. No. 11. Quiroga: A Mexican Municipio, 

 by Donald D. Brand. 



Institute of Social Anthropology Publ. No. 12. Cruz das Almas: A Brazilian 

 village, by Donald Pierson. 



Publications distributed totaled 19,660, as compared with 25,037 for 

 the fiscal year 1948. 



LIBKARY 



Accessions in the library totaled 112 volumes, bringing the total 

 accession record as of June 30, 1949, to 34,719. 



ILLUSTRATIONS 



During the entire year the work of restoration on the valuable 

 collection of old Indian photographs was continued. Approximately 

 150 restorations were completed. 



The remainder of the time of the illustrator and of his assistant 

 was spent on the regular work of preparation of illustrations and maps 

 for Bureau publications. 



