DEPARTMENT OF ANTHROPOLOGY 143 
Beginning at the west is a case containing a group of three 
Indians executed in plaster and elaborated with much detail. 
They are represented as engaged in the work of quarrying 
boulders and roughing out stone implements from them, there 
is also a case containing a model of the Serpent Mound in 
Adams county, Ohio. About these cases are many interesting 
reproductions of Central American stone carvings. 
The contents of several table cases are devoted to illustrat- 
ing the ancient flint, copper, soapstone and red pipestone quar- 
ries of the United States. 
Twenty-two table cases contain interesting archaeological 
material from, Kentucky, Missouri, Illinois, Michigan, Wisconsin, 
Ohio, Indiana, Maine and Canada, and objects from the Cliff 
Dwellings of Utah. 
Six table cases on the north side contain interesting and 
valuable collections from Yucatan, Chiapas, Oaxaca, Mexico. 
At the east end of the court are models of the Pueblos of 
Hano, Arizona; Taos, New Mexico; Acoma, New Mexico, and 
Pefiasco Blanco, New Mexico. 
Swung at various points beneath the galleries are boats 
representing many primitive peoples, and along the sides and at 
the ends of the court are exhibited totem poles or heraldic 
columns from British Columbia and Alaska. 
Case 1. — Manufacture of gun flints from Brandon, England. 
Cases 2 and 3. — Manufacture of stone implements from Mill 
Creek, Illinois. 
Case 4. — Manufacture of stone implements from Illinois. 
Case 5.^ — Manufacture of stone implements from Peoria, 
Indian Territory. 
Case 6. — Manufacture of stone implements from eastern 
Wyoming. 
Case 7. — Manufacture of stone implements from District of 
Columbia and Arkansas. 
Case 8. — Aboriginal copper mining implements from Michi- 
gan. Manufacture of soapstone vessels from the District of 
Columbia. Manufacture of stone implements from Minnesota, 
Wyoming, Virginia, Pennsylvania, Ohio and California. 
Case 9. — Manufacture of stone implements from Flint Ridge, 
Ohio, and cave finds from Missouri. 
Case 10. — Archaeology of Delaware Valley. 
