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Show 2 2. Report on the rums of New Mexico, by Dr. Oscar Loew 174 3. Report on certain ruins visited in New Mexico, by Lieut. Rogers Birnie, jr., Thirteenth United States Infantry 178 4. Report on the Pueblo languages of New Mexico- their affinity to each other and to the languages of other Iudian tribes, by Alb. S. Gatchet... 180 K.- Publications: Maps 187 Reports 188 Photographs 189 ILLUSTRATIONS. . Triangulation- map. Progress- map. Plate I.- Park near head of Conejos Cafion, Colorado. Plate U. - Pvocamehi8 occidentals; cranium, side- view, from Sun Ildefouso. Plate III.- View taken from the western flank of the Gallinas Mountains, looking north. Plate IV.- View from ruin No. 1 of Cristona, looking south. Plate V.- Bathmodon clephantopua ; cranium, side- view, from the Gallic as. Plate VI.- Bathmodon elephantopvs ; cranium, from below, from the Gallinas. Plate VII.- North Fork Canon, White Mountain Creek, Arizona. Plato VIII.- Oak Grove, White Mountain range, Arizona. Plato IX.- Ruin in the pueblo San Juan, showing walls of room in third story. Appendix F.-( Meteorology and hypsometry.) Diagram showing effects of temperature upon aneroid barometers. Appendix G I.-( Geology.) Fig. 1.- Strata of feldspathic porphyry and gneiss on Sangre de Cristo Creek, ueai the pass. Fig. 2.- Outcrop of Jurassic strata near Abiqnin. Fig. 3.- Diagrammatic sketch of the Zandia Mountains, looking east by south across the village of Placita. Fig. 4.- South wall of the Cafion Cangilon. Fig. 5.- View of a Jurassic anticlinal, looking north. Fig. 6.- Triassic mesa, bounded on the north by Jurassic bluffs capped by gypsum, immediately east of the anticlinal of Fig. 5. Fig. 7.- View of curved hog- back of Triassic sandstone, with red peak, and the red beds of the Trias, forming part of the Gallinas Mountains, looking north by east. Fig. 8.- Bad lands of the Trias, lookiug southeast. Fig. 9.- View of Triassic beds of Figs. 7 and 8, looking northeast. Fig. 10.- View of Nacimiento and adjacent mountains, lookiug southeast from the Eocene bluffs. Fig. 11.- Syncliual in Cretaceous, opposite the Cafioncito de las Vegas. Fig. 12.- Section of Cretaceous, at locality of Fig. 11. Fig. 13.- Hog- back and lignite of Cretaceous, at Cristona, looking south. Fig. 14.- View from hog- back of Cretaceous, from ruin No. 1, looking west- northwest. Fig. 15.- Eocene bad- land butte, looking south from camp No. 2. Fig. 16.- View of the Eocene bad- lauds, looking north from second camp west of the Gallinas. Fig. 17.- Bad lands of the Wahsatcb beds, near camp No. 2. Fig. IB.- Section nearly east and west from the Gallinas to the Eocene bluffs. Appendix G 2.-( Geology and mineralogy.) Fig. 1.- Section of the Arkansas valley, fivo miles above Pueblo, Colo., showing irregular stratification. Fig. 2.- Section showing the relative position ot the Carboniferous strata. Fig. 3.- Section of the bed of Rio de San Jose", two miles east of Lagona, showing the basaltic flow. Fig. 4.- Section showing the upheaved strata in the Gallinas Valley, near the Las Vegas Hot Springs. Appendix I.-( Zoology.) Diagram of ruins in the valley of the Rio Chama, near Abiquiu, N. Mex. Appendix 11.-( Ethnology, £- c.) Fig. 1.- Ground- piau of house No. 3. Fig. 2.- Ground- plan of houses Nos. 4 and 5 and profile of No. 4. Fig. 3.- Ground- plan of house No. 6. Fig. 4.- Ground- plau of house No. 7. Fig. . r).- View of houso No. 24. Fig. C- Iudian rock- etchings. |