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remarkable. A most striking feature of these exhibits is the great 
quantities of pearls, most of them having suffered from exposure 
to the sacrificial fires. 
No. 5. — Here we have two examples of the clay altars upon 
which the sacrifice of innumerable articles was made. 
Case O. — This case contains a model of the serpent mound, 
Adams county, Ohio, which has recently been embodied in a park 
under the auspices of the Peabody Museum of Cambridge, Mass. 
Case 7. — Relics from Ohio mounds. 
Case 8. — A single life size figure in plaster, representing a 
cannibal dancer of the Kwakiutl Indians of British Columbia. 
Case 9. — Relics from the cliff houses of Utah. In a number 
of table cases ranged along the west side are other remains from 
ancient Pueblan and other western sources. 
Case 10. — Large scale model of the Pueblo of Walpi, Ari- 
zona, inhabited by the Moki Indians. 
Case 11. — This case and six or seven table cases on the 
south side contain interesting and valuable collections from Mex- 
ico. They illustrate the art in stone, clay, metal and bone of th# 
ancient, half-civilized tribes of Yucatan, Chiapas, Oaxaca and the 
great plateau of Mexico. 
Case 11. — Four models illustrating the houses of the Eskimo. 
They are the snow house of Baffin’s Land, the stone house, and 
the summer tent of the same locality, and the sod house of East 
Greenland. 
Case 12. — Original skin lodge of the Cree Indians of Mani- 
toba ; with various appurtenances. 
Case 13. — Mexican antiquities, including some remarkable 
examples of sculpture. 
Case 14:. — Costa Rican antiquities, metates, pestles, stone im- 
plements and carvings. Nicaraguan antiquities, metates, pestles, 
stone implements and sculptures. 
No. 15. — Ancient Egyptian boat, found buried near the 
Dashour pyramids. 
ALCOVES OF THE EAST COURT. 
Alcove 81. — Exhibits of Egyptian antiquities, originals and 
casts. 
Alcove 82. — Egyptian antiquities including one case of 
