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51

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SMITHSONIAN INSTITUTION

BUREAU OF AMERICAN ETHNOLOGY

BULLETIN 58

LIST OF PUBLICATIONS

OF THE BUREAU OF

AMERICAN ETHNOLOGY

WITH

(Second Impression)

8 ii

SMITHSONIAN INSTITUTION

BUREAU OF AMERICAN ETHNOLOGY

BULLETIN 58

LIST OF PUBLICATIONS

OF THE BUREAU OF

AMERICAN ETHNOLOGY

WITH

INDEX TO AUTHORS AND TITLES

(Second impression)

•WASHINGTON

GOVKKXMEXT PRINTING OFFICE APRIL, 1915

LIST OF PUBLICATIONS OF THE BUREAU OF AMERICAN

ETHNOLOGY

WITH INDEX TO AUTHOBS AND TITLES

NOTE

The publications of the Bureau of American Ethnology consist of Contributions to North American Ethnology, Annual Reports, Bulle- tins, Introductions, and Miscellaneous Publications.

The series of Contributions, in quarto, was begun in 1877 by the Geographical and Geological Survey of the Rocky Mountain Region (J. W. Powell, director). Of the earlier numbers, printed under authority of special resolutions of Congress, volumes i, n (in two parts), and in had been completed when, in the year 1879, the Bureau of Ethnology was organized, with J. TV. Powell as director. In March, 1881, the publication of volumes vi, vrr, vnr, ix, and x was authorized by concurrent resolution of Congress, but the series was discontinued in 1895, after volumes i to vii and ix had been com- pleted.

The publication of the Annual Reports in royal octavo form began with that for the fiscal year ending June 30, 1880. Until 1895 the successive reports were each authorized by Congress, usually by con- current resolution; since that time they have been published under authority of the law providing for the printing and binding and the distribution of public documents, approved January 12, 1895.

At the close of the fiscal year 1913-14, twenty-eight Annual Reports had appeared (the Fourteenth, Seventeenth, Eighteenth, Nineteenth, and Twenty-second, each in two parts) , in all, thirty-three volumes ; the Twenty-ninth, Thirtieth, and Thirty-First Reports were in press, and the Thirty-second in preparation.

The present maximum edition of the Annual Reports is 9,850 copies. Of these the Senate receives 1,500, the House of Repre- sentatives 3,000, and the Bureau of American Ethnology 3,500 copies. From the remaining 1,850 copies are drawn the personal copies of Senators, Representatives, and Delegates, and 500 copies for distri- bution to Government libraries and to designated public depositories 1 throughout the country. The remainder are sold by the Superin- tendent of Documents, Government Printing Office, at a slight advance on the cost.

1 Each Senator, Representative, and Delegate in Congress is entitled to designate one depository to receive all public documents (see annual reports of the Superintendent of Documents, Government Printing Office).

3

BUREAU OF AMERICAN ETHNOLOGY [BOLL. 58

In August, 1886, the director of the bureau was authorized by joint resolution of Congress to begin the publication of a series of bulletins, which were issued in octavo form and in paper covers, and in July, 1888, the continuation of the series was authorized by con- current resolution. Provision for publishing the bulletins was omitted from the public printing law of January 12, 1895, and the issue terminated in 1894. Up to that time 24 bulletins had been pub- lished. By concurrent resolution in April, 1900, Congress authorized the resumption of the Bulletin series in royal octavo form. Nos. 25, 26, and 27 were issued under this provision, and in February, 1903, by joint resolution of Congress the octavo form was again resumed. Since then bulletins 28, 29, 30 (in two parts),1 31, 32, 33, 34, 35, 36, 37, 38, 39, 40 (part 1), 41, 42, 43, 44, 45, 47, 48, 49, 50, 51, 52, 53, 54, 56, and 58 have appeared, while Nos. 40 (part 2), 46, 55, and 57 are in press. The maximum edition of the Bulletin series is 9,850 copies, of which the Senate receives 1,500, the House of Representatives 3,000, and the Bureau of American Ethnology 3,500 copies. The remaining 1,850 copies are distributed by the Superintendent of Documents, Government Printing Office. Of these about 500 copies are sent to designated libraries ; the rest are held by him for sale at a price slightly above cost.

Besides the series mentioned there have been issued small editions of four Introductions- and of nine Miscellaneous Publications, in- tended wholly or chiefly for the use of collaborators and correspond- ents. These were not specially authorized by Congress, but as a rule were paid for from the annual appropriations for continuing researches.

With the exception of the few copies of the publications of the bureau disposed of by the Superintendent of Documents the editions are distributed free of charge. The quota allowed the bureau is distributed mainly to libraries and other institutions of learning and to collaborators and others engaged in anthropological research or in instruction.

ANNUAL REPORTS

First annual report of the Bureau of Ethnology to the secretary of the Smithsonian Institution 1879-80 by J. W. Powell director [Vignette] Washington Government Printing Office 1881

1 By concurrent resolution of Congress in August, 1912, a reprint of Bulletin 30 was ordered in an edition of 6,500 copies, of which 4,000 were for the use of the House of Representatives, 2,000 for the use of the Senate, and 500 for the use of the Bureau of American Ethnology.

LIST OF PUBLICATIONS 5

Roy. 8°. xxxv, 603 p., 347 fig. (incl. 54 pi.) , map. Out of print.

Report of the Director. P. xi-xxxin.

On the evolution of language, as exhibited in the specialization of the gram- matic processes, the differentiation of the parts of speech, and the integra- tion of the sentence; from a study of Indian languages, by J. W. Powell. P. 1-16.

Sketch of the mythology of the North American Indians, by J. W. Powell. P. 17-56.

Wyandot government: a short study of tribal society, by J. W. Powell. P. 57-69.

On limitations to the use of some anthropologic data, by J. W. Powell. P. 71-86.

A further contribution to the study of the mortuary customs of the North American Indians, by Dr. H. C. Yarrow, act. asst. surg., TJ. S. Army. P. 87-203, fig. 1-47.

Studies in Central American picture-writing, by Edward S. Holden, pro- fessor of mathematics, U. S. Naval Observatory. P. 205-245, fig. 48-60.

Cessions of laud by Indian tribes to the United States; illustrated by those in the state of Indiana, by C. C. Royce. P. 247-262, map.

Sign language among North American Indians compared with that among other peoples and deaf mutes, by Garrick Mallery. P. 263-552, fig. 61- 342a, 342&-S46.

Catalogue of linguistic manuscripts in the library of the Bureau of Eth- nology, by James C. Pilling. P. 553-577.

Illustration of the method of recording Indian languages. From the manu- scripts of Messrs. J. O. Dorsey, A. S. Gatschet, and S. R. Riggs. P. 579-589.

Index. P. 591-603.

Second annual report of the Bureau of Ethnology to the secretary of the Smithsonian Institution 1880-81 by J. W. Powell director [Vignette] Washington Government Printing Office 1S83 [1884] " Roy. 8°. xxxvii, 477 p., 77 pi., fig. 1-35, 347-714 (382 of these forming 98 pi.), 2 maps. Out of print.

Report of the Director. P. xv-xxxvu.

Zufu fetiches, by Frank Hamilton Gushing. P. 3-45, pi. i-xi, fig. 1-3. Myths of the Iroquois, by Erminnie A. Smith. P. 47-116, pi. xn-xv. Animal carvings from mounds of the Mississippi valley, by Henry W. Hen-

shaw. P. 117-166, fig. 4-35. Navajo silversmiths, by Dr. Washington Matthews, U. S. Army. P. 167-178,

pi. xvi-xx. Art in shell of the ancient Americans, by William H. Holmes. P. 179-305,

pi. XXI-LXXVII. Illustrated catalogue of the collections obtained from the Indians of New

Mexico and Arizona in 1879, by James Stevenson. P. 307-422, fig. 347-697,

map. Illustrated catalogue of the collections obtained from the Indians of New

Mexico in 18SO, by James Stevenson. P. 423-465, fig. 698-714, map. Index. P. 467-477.

Third annual report of the Bureau of Ethnology to the secretary of the Smithsonian Institution 1881-82 by J. W. Powell director [Vignette] Washington Government Printing Office 1884 [1885]

6 BUREAU OP AMERICAN ETHNOLOGY [BULL. 58

Roy. 8°. LXXIV, 606 p., 44 pi., 200 (-f- 2 unnumbered) fig. Out of print.

Report of the Director. P. XIII-LXXIV.

On activital similarities. P. LXV-LXXIV. Notes on certain Maya and Mexican manuscripts, by Prof. Gyms Thomas.

P. 3-65, pi. i-iv, fig. 1-10. On masks, labrets, and certain aboriginal customs, with an inquiry into the

bearing of their geographical distribution, by William Healey Dall, assist- ant U. S. Coast Survey; honorary curator U. S. National Museum. P.

67-202, pi. v-xxix. Omaha sociology, by Rev. J. Owen Dorsey. P. 205-370, pi. xxx-xxxm,

fig. 12-42. Navajo weavers, by Dr. Washington Matthews, U. S. A. P. 371-391, pi.

xxxiv-xxxvin, fig. 42-59. Prehistoric textile fabrics of the United States, derived from impressions

on pottery, by William H. Holmes. P. 393-425, pi. xxxix, fig. 60-115. Illustrated catalogue of a portion of the collections made by the Bureau of

Ethnology during the field season of 1881, by William H. Holmes. P.

427-510, fig. 116-200. Illustrated catalogue of the collections obtained from the pueblos of Zunl,

New Mexico, and Wolpi, Arizona, in 1881, by James Stevenson. P. 511-

594, pi. XX-XLIV. Index. P. 595-606.

Fourth annual report of the Bureau of Ethnology to the secretary of the Smithsonian Institution 1882-83 by J. W. Powell director [Vignette] Washington Government Printing Office 1886 [1887] Roy. 8°. LXIII, 532 p., 83, pi., 565 fig. Out of print. Report of the Director. P. XXVII-LXIII. Pictographs of the North American Indians. A preliminary paper, by

Garrick Mallery. P. 3-256, pi. I-LXXXIII, fig. 1-111, 1110-209. Pottery of the ancient Pueblos, by William H. Holmes. P. 257-360, fig.

210-360. Ancient pottery of the Mississippi valley, by William H. Holmes. P. 361-

436, fig. 361-463. Origin and development of form and ornament in ceramic art, by William

H. Holmes. P. 437-465, fig. 464-489. A study of Pueblo pottery as illustrative of Zuni culture growth, by Frank

Hamilton Gushing. P. 467-521, fig. 490-564. Index to accompanying papers. P. 523A-532.

Fifth annual report of the Bureau of Ethnology to the secretary

of the Smithsonian Institution 1883-84 by J. W. Powell director

[Vignette] Washington Government Printing Office 1887 [1888]

Roy. 8°. Lm, 564 p., 23 p. (incl. 2 pocket maps), 77 fig. Out

of print.

Report of the Director. P. xvn-tm.

Burial mounds of the northern sections of the United States, by Prof. Cyrus

Thomas. P. 3-119, pi. i-vi, fig. H9.

The Cherokee Nation of Indians : a narrative of their official relations with the colonial and federal governments, by Charles C. Royce. P. 121-378, pi. vm-ix (pi. vn and ix are pocket maps).

LIST OP PUBLICATIONS 7

The mountain chant : a Navajo ceremony, by Dr. Washington Matthews,

U. S. Army. P. 379-467, pi. x-xvm, fig. 50-59. The Seminole Indians of Florida, by Clay MacCauley. P. 469-531, pi. xix,

fig. 60-77. The religious life of the Zuni child, by Mrs. Tilly E. Stevenson. P. 533-

555, pi. xx-xxm. Index. P. 557-564.

Sixth annual report of the Bureau of Ethnology to the secretary of the Smithsonian Institution 1884-85 by J. W. Powell director [Vignette] Washington Government Printing Office 1888 [1889] Roy. 8°. LVIII, 675 p. (incl. 6 p. of music), 10 pi. (incl. 2 pocket maps) , 546 fig., 44 small unnumbered cuts. Out of print. Report of the Director. P. XXIII-LVIII. Ancient art of the province of Chiriqui, Colombia, by William H. Holmes.

P. 3-187, pi. I, fig. 1-285. A study of the textile art in its relation to the development of form and

ornament, by William H. Holmes. P. 189-252, fig. 286-358. Aids to the study of the Maya codices, by Prof. Cyrus Thomas. P. 253-371,

fig. 359-388.

Osage traditions, by Rev. J. Owen Dorsey. P. 373-397, fig. 389. The Central Eskimo, by Dr. Franz Boas. P. 399-669, pi. n-x, fig. 390-546

(pi. H and in are pocket maps). Index. P. 671-675.

Seventh annual report of the Bureau of Ethnology to the secretary of the Smithsonian Institution 1885-86 by J. W. Powell director [Vignette] Washington Government Printing Office 1891 [1892]

Roy. 8°. XLIII, 409 p., 27 pi. (incl. pocket map), 39 fig. Out of print.

Report of the Director. P. XV-XLI.

Indian linguistic families of America north of Mexico, by J. W. Powell.

P. 1-142, pi. i (pocket map). The Mide'wiwin or " grand medicine society " of the Ojibwa, by W. J.

Hoffman. P. 143-300, pi. ii-xxm, fig. 1-39. The sacred formulas of the Cherokees, by James Mooney. P. 301-397, pi.

XXIV-XXVII.

Index. P. 399-409.

Eighth annual report of the Bureau of Ethnology to the secretary of the Smithsonian Institution 1886-87 by J. W. Powell director [Vignette] Washington Government Printing Office 1891 [1893] Roy. 8°. xxxvi, 298 p., 123 pi., 118 fig. Out of print. Report of the Director. P. xm-xxxvi. A study of Pueblo architecture : Tusayan and Cibola, by Victor Mindeleff.

P. 3-228, pi. i-cxi, fig. 1-114. Ceremonial of Hasjelti Dailjis and mythical sand painting of the Navajo

Indians, by James Stevenson. P. 229-285, pi. CXII-CXXIH, fig. 115-118. Index. P. 287-298.

Ninth annual report of the Bureau of Ethnology to the secretary of the Smithsonian Institution 1887-88 by J. W. Powell director [Vignette] Washington Government Printing Office 1892 [1893]

8 BUREAU OF AMERICAN ETHNOLOGY [BDLL. 58

Roy. 8°. XLVI, 617 p., 8 pi., 448 fig. Out of print.

Report of the Director. P. XIX-XLVI.

Ethnological results of the Point Barrow expedition, by John Murdoch, naturalist and observer, International Polar expedition to Point Barrow, Alaska, 1881-1883. P. 3^41, pi. i-n, fig. 1-428. The medicine-men of the Apache, by John G. Bourke, captain, third cavalry,

U. S. Army. P. 443-603, pi. ni-viii, fig. 429-448. Index. P. 605-617.

Tenth annual report of the Bureau of Ethnology to the secretary

of the Smithsonian Institution 1888-89 by J. W. Powell director

[Vignette] Washington Government Printing Office 1893 [1894]

Roy. xxx, 822 p., 54 pi., 1291 fig., 116 small unnumbered cuts.

Out of print.

Report of the Director. P. m-xxx.

Picture-writing of the American Indians, by Garrick Mallery. P. 3-807, pi.

I-LIV, fig. 1-145, 1450-1290. Index. P. 809-822.

Eleventh annual report of the Bureau of Ethnology to the secretary of the Smithsonian Institution 1889-90 by J. W. Powell director [Vignette] Washington Government Printing Office 1894 Roy. 8°. XLVII, 553 p., 50 pi., 200 fig. Out of print. Report of the Director. P. XXI-XLVII.

The Sia, by Matilda Coxe Stevenson. P. 3-157, pi. i-xxxv, fig. 1-20. Ethnology of the Ungava district, Hudson Bay territory, by Lucien M. Turner. [Edited by John Murdoch.] P. 159-350, pi. XXXVI-XLIII, fig. 21-155. A study of Siouan cults, by James Owen Dorsey. P. 351-544, pi. XLIV-L,

fig. 156-200. Index. P. 545-553.

Twelfth annual report of the Bureau of Ethnology to the secretary of the Smithsonian Institution 1890-91 by J. W. Powell director [Vignette] Washington Government Printing Office 1894 Roy. 8°. XLVIII, 742 p., 42 pi., 344 fig. Out of print. Report of the Director. P. XIX-XLVII. Report on the mound explorations of the Bureau of Ethnology, by Cyrus

Thomas. P. 3-730, pi. I-XLII, fig. 1-344. Index. P. 731-742.

Thirteenth annual report of the Bureau of Ethnology to the secre- tary of the Smithsonian Institution 1891-92 by J. W. Powell director [Vignette] Washington Government Printing Office 1896

Roy. 8°. LIX, 462 p., 60 pi., 330 fig. Out of print.

Report of the Director. P. XIX-LIX.

Prehistoric textile art of Eastern United States, by William Henry Holmes,

P. 3-46, pi. i-ix, fig. 1-28.

Stone art, by Gerard Fowke. P. 47-178, fig. 29-278. Aboriginal remains in Verde valley, Arizona, by Cosmos Mindeleff. P.

179-261, pi. X-L, fig. 279-305. Omaha dwellings, furniture, and implements, by James Owen Dorsey. P.

263-288, fig. 306-327.

LIST OF PUBLICATIONS 9

Casa Grande ruin, by Cosmos Mindeleff. P. 289-319, pi. LI-LX, fig. 328-330. Outlines of Zuni creation myths by Frank Hamilton Cushing. P. 321-447. Index. P. 449-462.

Fourteenth annual report of the Bureau of Ethnology to the secre- tary of the Smithsonian Institution 1892-93 by J. W. Powell director In two parts part 1 [-2] [Vignette] Washington Gov- ernment Printing Office 1896 [1897]

Eoy. 8°. Two parts. LXI, 1-637; 639-1136 p., 122 pi. 104 fig. Out of print.

Report of the Director. P. XXV-LXI.

The Menomini Indians, by Walter James Hoffman, M. D. P. 3-328, pi.

i-xxxvii, fig. 1-55. The Coronado expedition, 1540-1542, by George Parker Winship. P. 329-

613, pi. XXXVIU-LXXXIV. Index to part 1. P. 615-637. . The Ghost-dance religion and the Sioux outbreak of 1890, by James Mooney.

P. 641-1110, pi. LXXXV-CXXII, fig. 56-104. Index to part 2. P. 1111-1136.

Fifteenth annual report of the Bureau of Ethnology to the secre- tary of the Smithsonian Institution 1893-94 by J. W. Powell director [Vignette] "Washington Government Printing Office 1897 Eoy. 8°. cxxi, 366 p., frontispiece, 125 pi., 49 fig. Out of print.

Report of the Director. P. xv-cxxi. On regimentation. P. civ-cxxi.

Stone implements of the Potomac-Chesapeake tidewater province, by Wil- liam Henry Holmes. P. 3-152, pi. i-cni and frontispiece, fig. l-29a.

The Siouan Indians: a preliminary sketch, by W J McGee. P. 153-204.

Siouau sociology: a posthumous paper, by James Owen Dorsey. P. 205- 244. fig. 30-38.

Tusayan katcinas, by Jesse AValter Fewkes. P. 245-313, pi. civ-cxi, fig. 39-48.

The repair of Casa Grande ruin, Arizona, in 1891, by Cosmos Mindeleff. P. 315-349, pi. cxii-cxxv.

Index. P. 351-366.

Sixteenth annual report of the Bureau of American Ethnology to the secretary of the Smithsonian Institution 1894-95 by J. W. Powell director [Vignette] Washington Government Printing Office 1897

Roy. cxix, 326 p., 81 pi., 83 fig. Out of print.

Report of the Director. P. xm-cxix.

List of publications of the Bureau of American Ethnology. P. ci-cxix.

Primitive trephining in Peru, by Manuel Antonio Muniz and W J McGee.

P. 3-72, pi. I-XL. The cliff-ruins of Canyon de Chelly, Arizona,, by Cosmos Mindeleff. P. 73-

198, pi. LXI-LXIII, fig. 1-83. Day symbols of the Maya year, by Cyrus Thomas. P. 199-265, pi. LXIV-

LXIX. Tusayan snake ceremonies by Jesse Walter Fewkes. P. 267-312, pi. LXX-

LXXXI.

Index. P. 313-326.

SSS140— Bull. 58—15 2

10 BUREAU OF AMERICAN ETHNOLOGY [BULL. 58

Seventeenth annual report of the Bureau of American Ethnology to the secretary of the Smithsonian Institution 1895-96 by J. W. Powell director In two parts part 1 [-2] [Vignette] Washing- ton Government Printing Office 1898 [part 1, 1900, part 2, 1901]

Eoy. 8°. Two parts, xcv, 1-128, 129*-344*, 129-468; 465-752 p., 182 pi., 357 fig. Out of print.

Report of the Director. P. xxv-xcm.

List of publications of the Bureau of American Ethnology. P. LXXV-

XCIII.

The Seri Indians, by W J McGee. P. 1-128, 129*-344*, pi. i-m«, mb, ivc,

iv6, vo, v&, via, vi &, viia, vnb-ixo, IX&-LVI, fig. 1-42.

Comparative lexicology, by J. N. B. Hewitt. P. 299*-344*. Calendar history of the Kiowa Indians, by James Mooiie^. P. 129-445, pi.

LVII-LXXXI, fig. 43-229. Index to part 1. P. 447-468.

Navaho houses, by Cosmos Mindeleff. P. 469-517, pi. LXXXII-XC, fig. 230-244. Archeological expedition to Arizona in 1895, by Jesse Walter Fewkes. P.

519-744, pi. xcia, XCI&-CLXXV, fig. 245-357. Index to part 2. P. 745-752.

Eighteenth annual report of the Bureau of American Ethnology to the secretary of the Smithsonian Institution 1896-97 by J. W. Powell director In two parts part 1 [-2] [Vignette] Wash- ington Government Printing Office 1899 [part 1, 1901, part 2, 1902]

Roy. 8°. Two parts, Lvn, 1-518; 519-997 p., 174 pi., 165 fig. Out of print.

Report of the Director. P. XXIII-LVII.

The Eskimo about Bering strait, by Edward William Nelson. P. 3-518, pi.

i-cvn, fig. 1-165. Indian land cessions in the United States, compiled by Charles C. Royce,

with an introduction by Cyrus Thomas. P. 521-964, pi. CVIII-CLXXIV. Index. P. 965-997.

Nineteenth annual report of the Bureau of American Ethnology to the secretary of the Smithsonian Institution 1897-98 by J. W. Powell director In two parts part 1 [-2] [Vignette] Wash- ington Government Printing Office 1900 [1902]

Eoy. S°. Two parts, xcn, 1-568, 569*-576* ; 569-1160 p., frontis- piece, 80 pi., 49 fig. Out of print.

Report of the Director. P. ix-xcn, frontispiece.

Esthetology, or the science of activities designed to give pleasure. P.

LV-XCII.

Myths of the Cherokee, by James Mooney. P. 3-548, pi. i-xx, fig. 1-2. Index to part 1. P. 549-568, 569*-576*.

Tusayan migration traditions, by Jesse Walter Fewkes. P. 573-633. Localization of Tusayan clans, by Cosmos Mindeleff. P. 635-653, pi. xxi-

xxviu, fig. 3. Mounds in northern Honduras, by Thomas Gann. P. 655-692, pi. xxix-

xxxix, fig. 4-7.

LIST OF PUBLICATIONS 11

Mayan calendar systems, by Cyrus Thomas. P. 693-819, pi. XL/-XLIIIO,

XLIII&-XLIV, fig. 8-17o, 17&-22. Primitive numbers, by W J McGee. P. 821-851. Numeral systems of Mexico and Central America, by Cyrus Thomas. P.

853, 955, fig. 23-41. Tusayan Flute and Snake ceremonies, by Jesse Walter Fewkes. P. 957-

1011, pi. XLV-LXV, fig. 42-46. The wild-rice gatherers of the upper lakes, a study in American primitive

economics, by Albert Ernest Jenks. P. 1013-1137, pi. LXVI-LXXIX, fig.

47^8. Index to part 2. P. 1139-1160.

Twentieth annual report of the Bureau of American Ethnology to the secretary of the Smithsonian Institution 1898-99 by J. W. Powell director [Vignette] Washington Government Printing Office 1903

Eoy. 8°. ccxxiv, 237 p., 180 pi., 79 fig. Out of print.

Report of the Director. P. vn-ccxxm.

Technology, or the science of industries. P. XXIX-LVII.

Sociology, or the science of institutions. P. LIX-CXXXVIII.

Philology, or the science of activities designed for expression. P.

CXXXIX-CLXX.

Sophiology, or the science of activities designed to give instruction. P.

CLXXI-CXCVII. List of publications of the Bureau of American Ethnology. P. cxcix-

CCXXIII.

Aboriginal pottery of the eastern United States, by W. H. Holmes. P. 1-201,

pi. I-LXXVIII, LXXVIII A, LXXIX-LXXIX B, LXXX-CLXXVII, fig. 1-79.

Index.

Twenty-first annual report of the Bureau of American Ethnology to the secretary of the Smithsonian Institution 1899-1900 by J. W. Powell director [Vignette] Washington Government Printing Office 1903

Koy. 8°. XL, 360 p., 69 pi. Out of print.

Report of the Director. P. VII-XL, pi. i.

Hopi katcinas, drawn by native artists, by Jesse Walter Fewkes. P. 3-126,

pi. II-LXIII.

Iroquoian cosmology, by J. N. B. Hewitt. P. 127-339, pi. LXIV-LXIX. Index.

Twenty-second annual report of the Bureau of American Eth- nology to the secretary of the Smithsonian Institution 1900-1901 J. W. Powell director In two parts part 1 [-2] [Vignette] Washington Government Printing Office 1903

Roy. 8°. Two parts. XLTV, 1-320; 1-372 p., 91 pi., 178 fig. Out of print. *

Report of the Acting Director. P. vn-xLrv.

Two summers' work in pueblo ruins, by Jesse Walter Fewkes. P. 3-195, pi.

I-LXX, fig. 1-120.

Mayan calendar systems. II, by Cyrus Thomas. P. 197-305, pi. LXXI- LXXXII, fig. 121-168.

12 BUREAU OF AMERICAN ETHNOLOGY [BULL. 58

Index to part 1.

The Hako, a Pawnee ceremony, by Alice C. Fletcher, holder of Thaw fellow- ship, Peabody Museum, Harvard University. P. 5-368, pi. LXXXIII-XCI,

fig. 169-178. Index to part 2.

Twenty-third annual report of the Bureau of American Ethnology to the secretary of the Smithsonian Institution 1901-2 J. W. Powell director [Vignette] Washington Government Printing Office 1904 [1905]

Eoy. 8°. XLV, 634 p., 139 pi., 34 fig. Out of print.

Report of the Acting Director. P. VII-XLV.

The Zuni Indians, their mythology, esoteric fraternities, and ceremonies, by

Matilda Coxe Stevenson. P. 1-608. Index.

Twenty-fourth annual report of the Bureau of American Eth- nology to the secretary of the Smithsonian Institution 1902-3 W. H. Holmes chief [Vignette] Washington Government Print- ing Office 1907

Eoy. 8°. XL, 846 p., 21 pi., 1112 fig. Out of print.

Report of the Chief. P. VII-XL.

Games of the North American Indians, by Stewart Culin. P. 3-809.

Index.

Twenty-fifth annual report of the Bureau of American Ethnology to the secretary of the Smithsonian Institution 1903-4 [Vignette] Washington Government Printing Office 1907

Roy. 8°. xxix, 296 p., 129 pi., 70 fig. Out of print.

Report of the Chief. P. ix-xxix.

The aborigines of Porto Rico and neighboring islands, by Jesse Walter

Fewkes. P. 3-220, pi. i-xcin, fig. 1-43. Certain antiquities of eastern Mexico, by Jesse Walter Fewkes. P. 221-284,

pi. xciv-cxxix, fig. 44-70. Index.

Twenty-sixth annual report of the Bureau of American Ethnology to the secretary of the Smithsonian Institution 1904-5 [Vignette] Washington Government Printing Office 1908

Roy. 8°. xxxi, 512 p., 58 pi., 117 fig. Out of print.

Report of the Chief. P. vu-xxxi.

The Pima Indians, by Frank Russell. P. 3-389, pi. I-XLVII, fig. 1-102.

The Tlingit Indians, by John R. Swanton. P. 391-485, pi. XLVIH-LVIII, fig.

103-117. Index.

Twenty-seventh annual report of the Bureau of American Ethnol- ogy to the secretary of the Smithsonian Institution 1905-6 [Vi- gnette] Washington Government Printing Office 1911

LIST OF PUBLICATIONS 13

Eoy. 8°. P. 672, 65 pi., 132 fig.

Report of the Chief. P. 5-14.

The Omaha tribe, by Alice C. Fletcher, holder of the Thaw fellowship, Pea- body Museum, Harvard University, and Francis La Flesche, a member of the Omaha tribe. P. 15-654. Index.

Twenty-eighth annual report of the Bureau of American Eth- nology to the secretary of the Smithsonian Institution 1906-7 [Vignette] Washington Government Printing Office 1912 Eoy. P. 308, xxxv, 103 pi., 68 fig.

Report of the Chief. P. 7-22.

Casa Grande, Arizona, by Jesse Walter Fewkes. P. 25-179, pi. 1-78, fig.

1-54. Antiquities of the upper Verde River and Walnut Creek valleys, Arizona,

by Jesse Walter Fewkes. P. 181-220, pi. 79-102, fig. 55-68. Preliminary report on the linguistic classification of Algonquian tribes, by

Truman Michelson. P. 221-290b, pi. 103. Index. List of publications of the Bureau of American Ethnology. P. i-xxxv.

In Press

Twenty-ninth annual report of the Bureau of American Ethnology to the secretary of the Smithsonian Institution 1907-8 [Vignette] Washington Government Printing Office

Eoy. 8°.

Report of the Chief.

Ethnogeography of the Tewa Indians, by John Peabody Harrington.

Thirtieth annual report of the Bureau of American Ethnology to the secretary of the Smithsonian Institution 1908-9 [Vignette] Washington Government Printing Office

Eoy. 8°.

Report of the Chief.

Ethnobotany of the ZuSi Indians, by Matilda Coxe Stevenson.

An inquiry into the animism and folk-lore of the Guiana Indians, by Walter

E. Roth.

Thirty-first annual report of the Bureau of American Ethnology to the secretary of the Smithsonian Institution 1909-10 [Vignette] Washington Government Printing Office Eoy. 8°.

Report of the Ethnologist-in-charge. Tsimshian mythology, by Franz Boas.

Thirty-second annual report of the Bureau of American Ethnology to the secretary of the Smithsonian Institution 1910-11 [Vi- gnette] Washington Government Printing Office

14 BUREAU OF AMERICAN ETHNOLOGY [BULL. 58

Roy. 8°.

Report of the Ethnologist-in-charge.

Seneca myths and fiction, collected by Jeremiah Curtin and J. N. B. Hewitt ; edited by J. N. B. Hewitt.

BULLETINS

(1). Bibliography of the Eskimo language by James Constantine Pilling 1887

8°. v, 116 p. (incl. 8 p. of facsimiles).

(2). Perforated stones from California by Henry W. Henshaw 188T

8°. 27 p., 22 fig.

(3). The use of gold and other metals among the ancient inhabit- ants of Chiriqui, Isthmus of Darien by William H. Holmes 1887

8°. 27 p., 22 fig.

(4). Work in mound exploration of the Bureau of Ethnology by Cyrus Thomas 1887

8°. 15 p., 1 fig.

(5) . Bibliography of the Siouan languages by James Constantine Pilling 1887

8°. v, 87 p.

(6). Bibliography of the Iroquoian languages by James C. Pil- ling 1888 [1889]

8°. vi, 208 p. (incl. 4 p. facsimiles), 5 unnumbered facsimiles. Out of print.

(7). Textile fabrics of ancient Peru by William H. Holmes 1889

8°. 17 p., 11 fig.

(8). The problem of the Ohio mounds by Cyrus Thomas 1889

8°. 54 p., 8 fig.

(9). Bibliography of the Muskhogean languages by James Con- stantine Pilling 1889

8°. v, 114 p. Out of print.

(10). The circular, square, and octagonal earthworks of Ohio by Cyrus Thomas 1889

8°. 35 p., 11 pi., 5 fig. Out of print.

(11). Omaha and Ponka letters by James Owen Dorsey 1891

8°. 127 p. Out of print.

(12). Catalogue of prehistoric works east of the Rocky mountains by .Cyrus Thomas 1891

8°. 246 p., 17 pi. and maps. Out of print.

(13). Bibliography of the Algonquian languages by James Con- stantine Pilling 1891 [1892]

8°. x, 614 p., 82 facsimiles. Out of print.

LIST OF PUBLICATIONS 15

(14). Bibliography of the Athapascan languages by James Con- stantine Pilling 1892

8°. xni, 125 p. (incl. 4 p. facsimiles). Out of print.

(15). Bibliography of the Chinookan languages (including the Chinook jargon) by James Constantine Pilling 1893

8°. XHI, 81 p. (incl. 3 p. facsimiles). Out of print.

(16). Bibliography of the Salishan languages by James Constan- tine Pilling 1883

8°. xin, 86 p. (incl. 4 p. facsimiles). Out of print.

(17). The Pamunkey Indians of Virginia by Jno. Garland Pol- lard 1894

8°. 19 p. Out of print.

(18). The Maya year by Cyrus Thomas 1894

8°. 64 p., 1 pi. Out of print.

(19). Bibliography of the Wakashan languages by James Con- stantine Pilling 1894

8°. xi, 70 p. (incl. 2 p. facsimiles). Out of print.

(20). Chinook texts by Franz Boas 1894 [1895]

8°. 278 p., 1 pi. Out of print.

(21). An ancient quarry in Indian Territory by William Henry Holmes 1894

8°. 19 p., 12 pi., 7 fig. Out of print.

(22). The Siouan tribes of the East by James Mooney 1894 [1895]

8°. 101 p., map. Out of print.

(23). Archeologic investigations in James and Potomac valleys by Gerard Fowke 1894 [1895]

8°. 80 p., 17 fig. Out of print.

(24). List of the publications of the Bureau of Ethnology, with index to authors and subjects by Frederick Webb Hodge 1894

8°. 25 p. Out of print.

(25). Natick dictionary by James Hammond Trumbull 1903

Roy. 8°. xxvni, 349 p.

(26). Kathlamet texts by Franz Boas 1901

Roy. 8°. 261 p., 1 pi.

(27). Tsimshian texts by Franz Boas 1902

Roy. 8°. 244 p.

(28). Mexican and Central American antiquities, calendar systems, and history twenty-four papers by Eduard Seler, E. Forstemann, Paul Schellhas, Carl Sapper, and E. P. Dieseldorff translated from the German under the supervision of Charles P. Bowditch 1904

8°. 682 p., 49 pi., 134 fig. Out of print.

(29). Haida texts and myths by John R. Swanton 1905

Roy. 8°. 448 p., 5 fig.

16 BUREAU OF AMERICAN ETHNOLOGY [BOLL. 58

(30). Handbook of American Indians north of Mexico edited by Frederick Webb Hodge. Pt. 1 1907 Ft 2 1910.

8°. Pt. 1. ix, 972 p., many figures, map. Pt. 2 iv, 1221 p., many figures. Out of print.

Reprinted, January, 1913, by Concurrent Resolution of August 12, 1912; 6,000 copies for the use of Congress and 500 copies for dis- tribution by the Bureau. The BurcaiCs allotment of this reprint is out of print.

(31). List of publications of the Bureau of American Ethnology, with index to authors and titles 1906

8°. 31 p. Out of print.

(32). Antiquities of the Jemez plateau, New Mexico by Edgar L. Hewett 1906

8°. 55 p., 17 pi., 31 fig., map. Out of print.

(33). Skeletal remains suggesting or attributed to early man in North America by Ales Hrdlicka 1907

8°. 113 p., 21 pi., 16 fig. Out of print.

(34). Physiological and medical observations among the Indians of southwestern United States and northern Mexico by Ales .Hrdlicka 1908

8°. ix, 460 p., 28 pi., 2 fig. Out of print.

(35). Antiquities of the upper Gila and Salt River valleys in Arizona and New Mexico by Walter Hough 1907

8°. 96 p., 11 pi., 51 fig., map Out of print.

(36) . List of publications of the Bureau of American Ethnology, with index to authors and titles 1907

8°. 31 p. Out of print.

(37). Antiquities of central and southeastern Missouri by Gerard Fowke. (Report on explorations made in 1906-7 under the auspices of the Archaeological Institute of America) [With a Report on skeletal material by Ales Hrdlicka] 1910

8°. vii, 116 p., 19 pi., 20 fig.

(38). Unwritten literature of Hawaii The sacred songs of the hula compiled and translated, with notes and an account of the hula by Nathaniel B. Emerson, A. M., M. D. 1909

8°. 288 p., 24 pi., 3 fig., 14 musical pieces

(39). Tlingit myths and texts by John R. S wanton 1909

8°. vni, 451 p. Out of print.

(40). Handbook of American Indian languages by Franz Boas Part 1 With illustrative sketches by Roland B. Dixon [Maidu], P. E. Goddard [Athapascan: Hupa], William Jones, revised by Truman Michelson [Algonquian (Fox)], John R. Swanton [Tlingit, Haida], William Thalbitzer [Eskimo]; [Franz Boas: Introduction, Chinook, Kwakiutl, Tsimshian; John R. Swanton and Franz Boas, Siouan] 1911. [Each sketch was issued also in separate form.]

8°. vii, 1069 p. Out of print.

LIST OF PUBLICATIONS 17

(41). Antiquities of the Mesa Verde National Park: Spruce-tree House by J. Walter Fewkes 1909

8°. vm, 57 p., 21 pi., 37 fig. Out of print.

(42). Tuberculosis among certain Indian tribes of the United States by Ales Hrdlicka 1909

8°. vn, 48 p., 22 pi. Out of print.

(43). Indian tribes of the lower Mississippi valley and adjacent coast of the Gulf of Mexico by John E. S wanton 1911

8°. vii, 387 p., 32 pi. (including 1 map), 2 fig.

(44) . Indian languages of Mexico and Central America, and their geographical distribution by Cyrus Thomas, assisted by John E. Swanton Accompanied with a linguistic map 1911

8°. vii, 108 p., 1 map

(45). Chippewa music by Frances Densmore 1910

8°. xix, 216 p., 12 pi., 8 fig., many musical pieces

(47) . A dictionary of the Biloxi and Of o languages, accompanied with thirty-one Biloxi texts and numerous Biloxi phrases by James Owen Dorsey and John E. Swanton 1912

8°. v, 340 p.

(48). The Choctaw of Bayou Lacomb, St. Tammany parish, Louisiana by David I. Bushnell, Jr. 1909

8°. 37 p., 22 pi., 1 fig. Out of print.

(49). List of publications of the Bureau of American Ethnology, with index to authors and titles 1910

8°. 32 p. Out of print. (Second impression 1911, 34 p. Out of print. See Twenty-eighth Annual Eeport, pp. i-xxxv.)

(50). Preliminary report on a visit to the Navaho National Monu- ment, Arizona by Jesse Walter Fewkes 1911

8°. vn, 35 p., 22 pi., 3 fig.

(51). Antiquities of the Mesa Verde National Park; Cliff Palace by Jesse Walter Fewkes 1911

8°. 82 p., 35 pi., 4 fig.

(52). Early man in South America by Ales Hrdlicka in collabo- ration with William H. Holmes, Bailey Willis. Fred. Eugene Wright, and Clarence N. Fenner 1912

8°. xv, 405 p., 68 pi., 51 fig.

(53). Chippewa music II by Frances Densmore 1913

8°. xxi, 341 p., 45 pi., 6 fig.

(54). The physiography of the Eio Grande valley, New Mexico, in relation to Pueblo culture: (1) The Eio Grande valley, by Edgar Lee Hewett; (2) Geology and topography, by Junius Henderson; (3) Climate and evidence of climatic changes, by Junius Hender- son and Wilfred William Eobbins 1913

8°. 76 p., 11 pi., 2 fig.

88814°— Bull. 58—15 3

18 BUREAU OF AMERICAN ETHNOLOGY [BULL. 58

(56). Ethnozoology of the Tewa Indians by Jimius Henderson and John Peabody Harrington 1914

8°. 76 p.

(58). List of publications of the Bureau of American Ethnology, with index to authors and titles 1914

8°. 39 p.

In Press

(40). Handbook of American Indian languages by Franz Boas Part 2 "With illustrative sketches

(46). A dictionary of the Choctaw language by Cyrus Byington edited by John R. Swanton and Henry S. Halbert

(55). Ethnobotany of the Tewa Indians by Wilfred William Robbins, John Peabody Harrington, and Barbara Freire-Marreco

(57). An introduction to the study of the Maya hieroglyphs by Sylvanus Griswold Morley

CONTRIBUTIONS TO NORTH AMERICAN ETHNOLOGY (All of the volumes of this series are out of print)

Department of the Interior U. S. Geographical and Geological survey of the Rocky Mountain region J. W. Powell in charge Contributions to North American ethnology Volume I [-VTI, IX]— [Seal of the department] Washington Government Printing Office 1877 [-1893]

4°. 9 vols.

Contents VOLUME I, 1877 :

Part i. Tribes of the extreme Northwest, by W. H. Dall. P. 1-106, 10

unnumbered pi., 9 unnumbered fig., pocket map. On the distribution and nomenclature of the native tribes of Alaska

and the adjacent territory. P. 7-40, pocket map. On succession in the shell-heaps of the Aleutian islands. P. 41-91, 10

pi., 9 fig.

On the origin of the Innuit. P. 93-106. Appendix to part i. Linguistics. P. 107-15G.

Notes on the natives of Alaska (communicated to the late George Gibbs, M. D., in 1862), by His Excellency J. Furuhelm, late governor of the Russian-American colonies. P. 111-116. Terms of relationship used by the Innuit : a series obtained from natives

of Cumberland inlet, by W. H. Dall. P. 117-119. Part i. Vocabularies [by George Gibbs and W. H. Dall]. P. 121-153.

Note on the use of numerals among the T'sini si-au', by George Gibbs,

M. D. P. 155-156. Part ir. Tribes of western Washington and northwestern Oregon, by George

Gibbs, M. D. P. 157-241, pocket map. Appendix to part n. Linguistics. P. 243-361.

Vocabularies [by George Gibbs, Wm. F. Tolmie, and G. Mengarini].

P. 247-283.

Dictionary of the Niskwalli [Xisqualli-English and English-Nisqualli], by George Gibbs. P. 285-361.

LIST OF PUBLICATIONS 19

VOLUME II, 1890 [1891] :

The Klamath Indians of southwestern Oregon, by Albert Samuel Gatschet.

Two parts, cvii, 711 p., map ; iii, 711 p. VOLUME III, 1877 :

Tribes of California, by Stephen Powers. 635 p., frontispiece, 44 fig. (incL

42 pi.), 3 p. music, pocket map.

Appendix. Linguistics, edited by J. W. Powell. P. 439-613. VOLUME IV, 1881:

Houses and house-life of the American aborigines, by Lewis H. Morgan,

xiv, 281 p., frontispiece, 57 fig. (incl. 28 pi.). VOLUME V, 1882:

Observations on cup-shaped and other lapidarian sculptures in the Old World and in America, by Charles Eau. 1881. 112 p., 61 fig. (form- ing 35 pis.). On prehistoric trephining and cranial amulets, by Robert Fletcher, M. B.

C. S. Eng., act. asst surgeon TJ. S. Army. 1882. 32 p., 9 pi., 2 fig. A study of the manuscript Troano, by Cyrns Thomas, Ph. D., with an intro- duction by D. G. Brinton, M. D. 1882. xxxvii, 237 p., 9 pi., 101 fig^ 25 small unnumbered cuts. VOLUME VT, 1890 [1892] :

The f egiha language, by James Owen Dorsey. xviii, 794 p. VOLUME VII, 1890 [1892] :

A Dakota-English dictionary, by Stephen Return Riggs, edited by James

Owen Dorsey. x, 665 p. VOLUME VIII : Not published. VOLUME IX, 1893 [1894] :

Dakota grammar texts, and ethnography, by Stephen Return Riggs, edited by James Owen Dorsey. xxxii, 239 p.

INTRODUCTIONS (.477 of the volumes of this series are out of print)

(1). Introduction to the study of Indian languages, with words, phrases, and sentences to be collected. By J. W. Powell. [Seal of the Department of the Interior.] Washington Government Printing Office 1877

4°. 104 p., 10 blank leaves.

Second edition as follows :

(2). Smithsonian Institution Bureau of Ethnology J.W.Powell director Introduction to the study of Indian languages with words, phrases and sentences to be collected by J. W. Powell Second edi- tion— with charts Washington Government Printing Office 1880

4°. xi, 228 p., 10 blank leaves, 4 kinship charts in pocket. A 16° "Alphabet " of 2 leaves accompanies the work.

(3). Smithsonian Institution Bureau of Ethnology Introduc- tion to the study of sign language among the North American Indians as illustrating the gesture speech of mankind by Garrick Mallery, brevet lieut. col.. U. S. Army— Washington Government Printing Office 1880

4°. iv, 72 p., 33 unnumbered figs.

BUREAU OF AMERICAN ETHNOLOGY [BULL. 58

(4). Smithsonian Institution Bureau of Ethnology J.W.Powell, director Introduction to the study of mortuary customs among the North American Indians by Dr. H. C. Yarrow act. asst. surg. U. S. Army Washington Government Printing Office 1880

4°. ix, 114 p.

MISCELLANEOUS PUBLICATIONS (All of the works in this series are out of print)

(1). Smithsonian Institution Bureau of Ethnology J.W.Powell, director A collection of gesture-signs and signals of the North American Indians with some comparisons by Garrick Mallery bre- vet lieut. col. and formerly acting chief signal officer, S. Army Distributed only to collaborators Washington Government Print- ing Office 1880

4°. 329 p.

NOTE. 250 copies printed for use of collaborators only.

(2). Smithsonian Institution Bureau of Ethnology J.W.Powell director Proof-sheets of a bibliography of the languages of the North American Indians by James Constantino Pilling (Distrib- uted only to collaborators) Washington Government Printing Office 1885

4°. xl, 1135 p., 29 pi. (facsimiles).

NOTE. Only 110 copies printed for the use of collaborators, 10 of them on one side of the sheet. It was the intention to have this Bibliography form Volume X of the Contributions to North American Ethnology, but the work assumed such proportions that it was subsequently deemed advisable to publish it as a part of the series of Bulletins, devoting a Bulletin to each linguistic stock.

(3). Linguistic families of the Indian tribes north of Mexico, with provisional list of the principal tribal names and synonyms. [1885]

16°. 55 p.

NOTE. A few copies printed for the use of the compilers of a Dictionary of American Indians [Handbook. See Bulletin SO]. It is without title-page, name, or date, but was compiled from a manuscript list of Indian tribes by James Mooney.

(4). [Map of] Linguistic stocks of American Indians north of Mexico by J. W. Powell. [1891]

NOTE. A limited edition of this map, which forms plate 1 of the Seventh Annual Report, was issued on heavy paper, 19 by 22 inches, for the use of students. This map was revised and published in the Report on Indians Taxed and Not Taxed in the United States at the Eleventh Census, 1890. ( See No. 7.)

(5). Tribes of North America, with synonymy. Skittagetan fam- ily. [1890] 4°. 13 p.

NOTE. A few copies printed for the use of the compilers of the Handbook of American Indians. It was prepared by H. W. Henshaw, and contains two samples of style for the Handbook, the second beginning on page 7 with the bead, "Dictionary of Indian tribal names." (See Bulletin 80.)

LIST OF PUBLICATIONS 21

(6). Advance pages Smithsonian Institution Bureau of Amer- ican Ethnology Dictionary of American Indians north of Mexico . . . [Vignette] Washington 1903

8°. 33 p.

NOTE. Prepared by F. W. Hodge. Two hundred and fifty copies printed by the Smithsonian Institution for the use of the compilers of the Dictionary [Handbook. See Bulletin 30].

(7). [Map of] Linguistic stocks of American Indians north of Mexico by J. W. Powell. [1906]

NOTE. Printed on heavy paper in advance of the Handbook of American Indians (Bulletin 30), part 1, of which it forms an illustration.

(8). Bureau of American Ethnology with list of publications. Reprinted from Handbook of American Indians, Bulletin 30 (pt. 1), Bureau of American Ethnology. [1906]

8°. 5 p.

(9). Indian missions north of Mexico by James Mooney. Re- printed from Handbook of American Indians, Bulletin 30 (pt. 1), Bureau of American Ethnology. Washington 1907

8°. 39 p.

INDEX TO AUTHORS AND TITLES

A=Annual Report. B=Bulletin. C=Contributions to North American Eth- nology. I=Introduction. M=Miscellaneous Publications.

Aborigines of Porto Rico and neighboring islands (Fewkes)_A xxv, 3.

Activital similarities (Powell) A in, Ixv.

Activities. See Esthetology; Philology; Sociology; Sophi-

ology ; Technology.

Alaska, Notes on the natives of (Furuhelm) C i, 111.

Algonquian languages, Bibliography of the (Pilling) B 13.

tribes, Preliminary report on classification of (Michelson)_A xxvni, 221.

See Bulletin 40 (pt 1).

Annilets, cranial, Prehistoric trephining and (R. Fletcher) C v.

Animal carvings from mounds of the Mississippi valley

(Henshaw) A ir, 117.

Animism and folk-lore of the Guiana Indians, An inquiry into

the (Roth) A xxx.

Anthropologic data, Limitations to the use of some ( Powell) __A i, 71.

Antiquities, Certain, of eastern Mexico (Fewkes) A. xxv, 221.

Antiquities; Mayan calendar systems, history, and (Forste-

mann, Schellhas, Sapper, Seler, Dieseldorff) B 28.

Mexican and Central American calendar systems and

( Seler) B 28.

of central and southeastern Missouri (Fowke) B 37.

of the Jemez plateau, New Mexico (Hewett) B 32.

of the Mesa Verde National Park : Spruce-tree House

(Fewkes) B 41.

Cliff Palace (Fewkes) B 51.

of the upper Gila-Salt valleys (Hough) B 35.

of the upper Verde and Walnut Creek valleys, Arizona

(Fewkes) A. xxvin, 181.

Apache, The medicine-men of the (Bourke)' A. ix, 443.

Archeological expedition to Arizona in 1895 (Fewkes) A xvn, 519.

Archeologic investigations in James and Potomac valleys

(Fowke) B 23.

Architecture of Tusayan and Cibola (V. Mindeleff) A vin, 3.

Arizona, Aboriginal remains in Verde valley in (C. Min- deleff) A. xin, 179.

Antiquities of the upper Gila-Salt valleys (Hough) B 35.

Archeological expedition to, in 1895 (Fewkes) A. xvn, 519.

Illustrated catalogue of collections from, in 1879 (J. Ste- venson) A. n, 307.

in 1881 (J. Stevenson) A in, 511.

Navaho National Monument, visit to (Fewkes) B 50.

The cliff-ruins of Canyon de Chelly in (C. Mindeleff) A xvi, 73.

See Casa Grande; Tusayan.

Art, Ancient, of the province of Chiriqui, Colombia (Holmes^ A vi, 3.

ceramic, Form and ornament in (Holmes) A. iv, 437.

in shell of the ancient Americans (Holmes) A 11, 179.

Prehistoric textile, of eastern United States (Holmes) A. xin, 3.

Stone (Fowke) A xni, 47.

textile, A study of the (Holmes) A. vi, 189.

22

LIST OF PUBLICATIONS 23

Artists, native, Hopi katcinas drawn by (Fewkes) A. xxi, 3.

Athapascan languages, Bibliography of the (Pilling) B 14.

See Bulletin 40 (pt. 1).

Bering strait, Eskimo about (Nelson) A. xvni, 3.

Bibliography of the Algonquian languages (Pilling) B 13.

of the Athapascan languages (Pilling) B 14.

of the Chinookan languages, including the Chinook jargon

(Pilling) B 15.

of the Eskimo language (Pilling) B 1.

of the Iroquoian languages (Pilling) B 6.

of the languages of the North American Indians, Proof- sheets of (Pilling) M 2.

of the Muskhogean languages (Pilling) B 9.

of the Salishan languages (Pilling) B 16.

of the Siouan languages (Pilling) B 5.

of the Wakashan languages (Pilling) B 19.

Biloxi-Ofo dictionary (Dorsey-Swanton) B 47.

Boas, Franz. Chinook texts B 20.

Kathlamet texts B 26.

The Central Eskimo ^ A vi, 399.

Tsirnshian mythology A xxxi.

Tsimshian texts B 27.

editor. Handbook of American Indian languages B 40.

Bourke, John G. The medicine-men of the Apache A ix. 443.

Bowditch, C. P. [Papers translated under the supervision of]_B 28. Briuton, Daniel G. The graphic system and ancient methods

of the Mayas C v(pt.3),xvii.

Busnnell, David I., jr. Choctaw of Bayou Lacomb, Louisiana_B 48. Byington, Cyrus. A dictionary of the Choctaw language

(Swanton and Halbert, editors) B 46.

Calendar history of the Kiowa Indians (Mooney) A xvn, 120.

Calendar systems, Mayan (Thomas) A xix, 693, and

xxn, pt. 1, 197. Mayan antiquities, history, and (Forstemann, Sehelllias,

Sapper, Seler, Dieseldorff) B 28.

Mexican and Central American antiquities and (Seler) B 28.

California, Perforated stones from (Henshaw) B 2.

Tribes of (Powers) C HI.

Carvings, Animal, from mounds of the Mississippi Valley

(Heushaw) A n, 117.

Casa Grande, Arizona (Fewkes) A xxvm, 25.

Casa Grande ruin (C. Mindeleff) A xin, 289.

The repair of, in 1891 (C. Mindeleff) A xv, 315.

Catalogue of collections from New Mexico and Arizona in

1879 (J. Stevenson) A n,307.

of collections from New Mexico in 1880 (J. Stevenson) A n, 423.

of collections from pueblos in 1881 (J. Stevenson) A m, 511.

of collections made in 1881 (Holmes) T A m, 427.

of linguistic manuscripts in the library of the Bureau of

Ethnology (Pilling) A 1,553.

of prehistoric works east of the Rocky Mountains

(Thomas) B 12.

24

BUREAU OF AMERICAN ETHNOLOGY

[BULL. 58

J3egiha language, The (Dorsey) C vi.

Central America, Indian languages of Mexico and (Thomas-

Swanton) B 44.

Numeral systems of Mexico and (Thomas) A xix, 853.

Central American picture-writing, Studies in (Holden) A i, 205.

and Mexican antiquities and calendar systems (Seler) B 28.

Ceremonial of Hasjelti Dailjis and mythical sand painting

of the Navajo (J. Stevenson) A vni, 229.

Ceremonies, Tusayan Snake (Fewkes) A xvi, 267.

Ceremony, The Hako, a Pawnee (A. C. Fletcher) A xxu, pt. 2, 5.

Cessions, Indian land, in the United States (Royce-Thomas)_A xvm, 521.

of land by Indian tribes to the United States (Royce) A xv, 315.

Cherokee, Myths of the (Mooney) A xix, 3.

nation of Indians, The (Royce) A v, 121.

The sacred formulas of the (Mooney) A vn, 301.

Chinookan languages, Bibliography of the (Pilling) B 15.

See Bulletin 40 (pt. 1).

Chinook texts (Boas) B 20.

Chippewa music (Densmore) B 45.

Chippewa music II (Densmore) B 53.

See Ojibwa.

Chiriqui, Colombia, Ancient art of the province of (Holmes). A vi 3.

The use of gold and other metals among the ancient inhab- itants of (Holmes) B 3.

Choctaw language, A dictionary of the (Byington), Swanton

and Halbert, editors B 46.

Choctaw of Bayou Lacomb, Louisiana (Bushnell) B 48.

Cibola, Architecture of Tusayan and (V. Mindeleff) A. vni, 3.

See Zuni.

Clans, Tusayan, Localization of (C. Mindeleff) A. xix, 635.

Cliff Palace, Mesa Verde National Park, Colorado (Fewkes)— B 51.

Cliff ruins of Canyon de Chelly, Arizona (C. Mindeleff) A. xvi, 73.

Codices, Maya, Aids to the study of the (Thomas) A. vi, 253.

Collections, Illustrated catalogue of, from New Mexico and

Arizona in 1879 (J. Stevenson) A. 11, 307.

from New Mexico in 1880 (J. Stevenson) A n, 423.

from pueblos in 1881 ( J. Stevenson) A. m, 511.

made in 1881 (Holmes) A in, 427.

Colorado, Antiquities of Mesa Verde National Park: Cliff

Palace (Fewkes) B 51.

Spruce-tree House (Fewkes) B 41.

Coronado expedition, 1540-1542, The (Winship) A xiv, 329.

Cosmology, Iroquoian (Hewitt) A xxi, 127.

Culin, Stewart. Games of the North American Indians A xxrv, 3.

Cults, Siouan, A study of (Dorsey) A. xi, 351.

Cup-shaped and other lapidarian sculptures (Ran) C v.

Curtin, Jeremiah, and Hewitt, J. N. B. Seneca myths and

fiction (edited by J. N. B. Hewitt) A. xxxn.

Cushing, F. H. Outlines of Zuni creation myths A xin, 321.

Pueblo pottery as illustrative of Zufii culture growth A iv, 467.

Zuni fetiches A. 11, 3.

LIST OP PUBLICATIONS 25

Dakota-English dictionary, A (Riggs) C vu.

Dakota grammar, text, and ethnography (Riggs) C ix.

Dall, William H. On masks, labrets, and certain aboriginal

customs A. in, 67.

Terms of relationship used by the Innuit C i, 117.

Tribes of the extreme Northwest C i, 1.

and Gibbs, George. Vocabularies of tribes of the extreme

Northwest C i, 121.

Day symbols of the Maya year (Thomas) A xvi, 199.

Densmore, Frances. Chippewa music B 45.

Chippewa music II C 53.

Dictionary, Biloxi-Ofo (Dorsey-Swanton) B 47.

Choctaw (Byington), Swanton and Halbert, editors B 46.

Dakota-English (Riggs) C vn.

Natick B 25.

of American Indians north of Mexico. Advance pages

(Hodge) M 6.

Dieseldorff, E. P., and others. Mayan antiquities, calendar

systems, and history B 28.

Dixon, Roland B. See Bulletin 40 (pt. 1).

Dorsey, J. Owen. Illustration of the method of recording

Indian languages A i, 579.

Omaha and Ponka letters B 11.

Omaha dwellings, furniture, and implements A xni, 263.

Omaha sociology A in, 205.

Osage traditions A vi, 373.

Siouan sociology A xv, 205.

study of Siouan cults, A A xi, 351.

The ^egiha language C vi.

and Swanton, John R. A dictionary of the Biloxi and

Ofo languages B 47.

editor. A Dakota-English dictionary, by Stephen Return

Riggs C vu.

Dakota grammar, texts, and ethnography, by S. R. Riggs_C ix.

Dwellings, furniture, and implements, Omaha (Dorsey) A xin, 263.

Earthworks, The circular, square, and octagonal, of Ohio

(Thomas) B 10.

Economics, primitive, A study in American (Jenks) A xix, 1013.

Emerson, N. B. Unwritten literature of Hawaii B 38.

Eskimo about Bering strait, The (Nelson) A xvin,3.

language, Bibliography of the (Pilling) B 1.

See Bulletin 40 (pt. 1).

The Central (Boas) A vi, 399.

See Point Barrow ; Ungava district. Esthetology, or the science of activities designed to give

pleasure (Powell) A xix, lv.

Ethnobotany of the Tewa Indians (Robbins, Harrington, and

Freire-Marreco) B 55.

Ethnobotany of the Zuni Indians (M. C. Stevenson) A xxx, 29.

Ethnogeography of the Tewa Indians (Harrington) A xxix, 29.

Ethnography, grammar, and texts, Dakota (Riggs) C ix.

Ethnology of the Ungava district (Turner) A xi, 159.

26

BUREAU OF AMERICAN ETHNOLOGY

[BULL. 58

Ethnozoology of the Tewa Indians (Henderson-Harrington) B 56.

Evolution of language (Powell) A i, 1.

Expression ; Philology, or the science of activities designed for

(Powell) A xx,cxxxix.

Fenner, Clarence N. (collaborator). Early man in South

America B 52.

Fetiches, Zuiii (Gushing) A n, 3.

Fewkes, Jesse Walter. Aborigines of Porto Rico and neigh- boring islands A xxv, 3.

Antiquities, Certain, of eastern Mexico A xxv, 221.

of Mesa Verde National Park: Cliff Palace B 51.

Spruce-tree House B 41.

of the upper Verde River and Walnut Creek valleys,

Arizona A. xxvni, 181.

Archeological expedition to Arizona in 1895 A xvu, 519.

Casa Grande, Arizona A xxvni, 25.

Hopi katcinas, drawn by native artists : A xxi, 3.

Preliminary report on visit to Navaho National Monument,

Arizona B 50.

Tusayan Flute and Snake ceremonies A xix, 957.

Tusayan katcinas A xv, 245.

Tusayan migration traditions A xix, 573.

Tusayan Snake ceremonies A xvi, 267.

Two summers' work in pueblo ruins A xxn, pt. 2, 3.

Fiction, Seneca, and myths (Curtin and Hewitt) A xxxn.

Fletcher, Alice C. The Hako: a Pawnee ceremony A xxn, pt. 2, 5.

and La Flesche, Francis. The Omaha tribe A xxvn, 17.

Fletcher, Robert. On prehistoric trephining and cranial

amulets C v.

Florida, The Seminole Indians of (MacCauley) A v, 469.

Flute and Snake ceremonies, Tusayan (Fewkes) A xix, 957.

Folk-lore, animism and, of the Guiana Indians, An inquiry into

the (Roth) ' A xxx.

Form and ornaments in ceramic art (Holmes) A iv, 437.

Formulas, Sacred, of the Cherokees (Mooney) A vn, 301.

Forstemann, E., and others. Mayan antiquities, calendar sys- tems, and history B 28.

Fowke, Gerard, Antiquities of central and southeastern Mis- souri B 37.

Archeologic investigations in James and Potomac valleys B 23.

Stone art A XITI, 47.

Freire-Marreco, Barbara, and others. Ethnobctany of the

Tewa Indians B 55.

Furniture, dwellings, and implements, Omaha (Dorsey) A xm, 263.

Furuhelm, J. Notes on the natives of Alaska C i, 111.

Games of the North American Indians (Culin) A. xxiv, 3.

Gann, Thomas. Mounds in northern Honduras A xix, 655.

Gatschet, Albert S. Illustration of the method of recording

Indian languages A i, 579.

The Klamath Indians of southwestern Oregon C 11.

Gesture signs and signals of the North American Indians

(Mallery) M 1.

LIST OF PUBLICATIONS

27

Gesture speech, Introduction to the study of sign language

as illustrating (Mallery) I 3.

Ghost-dance religion (Mooney) A. xiv, 641.

Gibbs, George. Notes on the use of numerals among the

T'sim-si-an' C i, 155.

Tribes of western Washington and northwestern Oregon C i, 157.

and Dall, W. H. Vocabularies of tribes of the extreme Northwest C i, 121.

Gila-Salt valleys, upper, antiquities of (Hough) B 35.

Goddard, P. E. See Bulletin 40 (pt. 1.)

Gold and other metals, Use of, among the ancient inhabit- ants of Chiriqui (Holmes) B 3.

Grammar, texts, and ethnography, Dakota (Riggs) C ix.

Graphic system and ancient methods of the Mayas (Brinton) __C v (pt. 3), XVH.

Guiana Indians, animism and folk-lore of, An inquiry into the

(Roth) A xxx.

Haida language. See Bulletin 40 (pt. 1).

texts and myths (Swanton) B 29.

Hako, The: a Pawnee ceremony (A. C. Fletcher) A xxn.pt. 2, 5.

Halbert, Henry S. (editor). A dictionary of the Choctaw

language B 46.

Hale, Edward Everett. Introduction to Natick Dictionary

(Trumbull) B 25.

Handbook of American Indian languages (Boas, editor) B 40.

of American Indians north of Mexico (Hodge, editor) B 30.

Harrington, J. P. Ethnogeography of the Tewa Indians A xxix, 29.

and Henderson, Junius. Ethnozoology of the Tewa Indians- B 56.

and others. Ethnobotany of the Tewa Indians B 55.

Hasjelti Dailjis ceremonial of the Navajo (J. Stevenson) A vm, 229.

Hawaii, Unwritten literature of (Emerson) B 38.

Henderson, Junius, and Harrington, J. P. Ethnozoology of

the Tewa Indians B 56.

and others. The physiography of the Rio Grande valley,

N. Mex B 54.

Henshaw, H. W. Animal carvings from mounds of the Mis- sissippi valley A H, 117.

Perforated stones from California B 2.

Tribes of North America, with synonymy. Skittagetan

family M 5.

Hewett, Edgar L. Antiquities of the Jemez plateau, New

Mexico B 32.

and others. The physiography of the Rio Grande valley,

N. Mex B .54.

Hewitt, J. N. B. Comparative lexicology (of the Serian and

Yuman languages) A xvn, 299*.

Iroquoian cosmology A xxi, 127.

and Curtin, Jeremiah. Seneca myths and fiction z_A xxxii.

Hieroglyphs, Maya, An introduction to the study of

the (Morley) B 57.

History: Mayan antiquities, calendar systems, and (Forste-

maun, Scbellhas, Sapper, Seler, Dieseldorff) B 28.

28 BUREAU OF AMERICAN ETHNOLOGY [BULL. r,s

Hodge, F. W. Advance pages. Dictionary of American In- dians north of Mexico M 6.

List of publications of the Bureau of Ethnology B 24, 36.

editor. Handbook of American Indians north of Mexico__B 30.

Hoffman, W. J. The Menomiui Indians..,. A. xiv, 3.

The Mide'wiwin or " grand medicine society " of the

Ojibwa A vn, 143.

Holden, B. S. Studies in Central American picture-writing A. I, 205.

Holmes, W. H. Aboriginal pottery of the eastern United

States A xx, 1.

An ancient quarry in Indian Territory B 21.

Ancient art of the province of Chiriqui, Colombia A. vr, 3.

Ancient pottery of the Mississippi valley A iv, 361.

Art in shell of the ancient Americans A ir. 179.

A study of the textile art in its relation to the develop- ment of form and ornament A, vi, 189.

Illustrated catalogue of a portion of the collections made by the Bureau of Ethnology during the field season of

1881 A. m,427.

Introduction to archeologic investigations in James and

Potomac valleys (Fowke) .B 23.

Origin and development of form and ornament in ceramic

art A iv, 437.

Pottery of the ancient Pueblos A. iv, 257.

Prehistoric textile art of eastern United States A xm, 3.

Prehistoric textile fabrics of the United States, derived

from impressions on pottery A. in, 393.

Stone implements of the Potomac-Chesapeake tidewater

province A xv, 3.

Textile fabrics of ancient Peru B 7.

The use of gold and other metals among the ancient in- habitants of Chiriqui, Isthmus of Darien B 3.

(collaborator.) Early man in South America B 52.

Honduras, northern, Mounds in (Gann) A. xix, 655.

Hopi katcinas, drawn by native artists (Fewkes) A xxi,3.

See also Tusayan.

Hough, Walter. Antiquities of the upper Gila-Salt valleys B 35.

Houses and house-life of the American aborigines ( Morgan )_C iv.

Houses, Navaho (C. Mindeleff) A. xvn,469.

HrdliSka, AleS. Physiological and medical observations among the Indians of southwestern United States and

northern Mexico B 34.

Skeletal material from Missouri B 37.

Skeletal remains suggesting or attributed to early man in

North America B 33.

Tuberculosis among certain Indian tribes of U. S B 42.

in collaboration with Holmes, Willis, Wright, and Fenner.

Early man in South America B 52.

Hudson Bay territory, Ethnology of the Ungava district

(Turner) A xi, 159.

Hula, Sacred songs of the (Emerson) B 38.

Hupa language. See Bulletin 40 (pt. 1).

LIST OF PUBLICATIONS 29

Illustrated catalogue of collections made in 1881 (Holmes) A in, 427.

of collections from New Mexico and Arizona in 1879

(J. Stevenson) A. u, 307.

of collections from New Mexico in 1880 (J. Stevenson) A n, 423.

of collections from pueblos in 1881 ( J. Stevenson) A HI, 511.

Illustration of the method of recording Indian languages

(Dorsey, Gatschet, Riggs) A i, 579.

Implements, Omaha dwellings, furniture and (Dorsey) A. xin, 263.

Stone, of the Potomac-Chesapeake tidewater province

(Holmes) A. xv, 3.

Indian Missions (Mooney) M 9.

Indian Territory, Ancient quarry in (Holmes) B 21.

Industries; Technology, or the science of (Powell) A xx, xxix.

Innuit, Terms of relationship used by the (Dall) C i, 117.

Institutions; Sociology, or the science of (Powell) A. xx, lix.

Instruction ; Sophiology, or the science of activities designed

to give (Powell) A xx, clxxi.

Introduction to Natick Dictionary (Hale) B 25.

to the study of Indian languages (Powell) I 1 and 2.

to the study of mortuary customs (Yarrow) 1 4.

to the study of sign language (Mallery) 1 3.

Iroquoian cosmology (Hewitt) A xxi, 127.

languages, Bibliography of the (Pilling) B 6.

Iroquois, Myths of the (Smith) A. n,47.

James and Potomac valleys, Archeologic investigations in

(Fowke) B 23.

Jemez plateau, New Mexico, Antiquities of the (Hewett) B 32.

Jenks, Albert Ernest. Wild-rice gatherers of the upper lakes A xix, 1013.

Jones, William. See Bulletin 40 (pt. 1).

Justice; Sociology, or the science of activities designed for

(Powell) A xx, lix.

Katcinas, Hopi, drawn by native artists (Fewkes) A. xxi, 3.

Tusayan (Fewkes) A. xv? 245.

Kathlamet texts (Boas) B 26.

Kiowa Indians, Calendar history of the (Mooney) A. XVH, 129.

Klamath Indians of southwestern Oregon, The (Gatschet) C u.

Kwakiutl language. See Bulletin 40 (pt. 1).

Labrets, masks, and certain aboriginal customs (Dall) A. in, 67.

La Flesche, Francis, and Fletcher, Alice C. The Omaha tribe A xxvii, 17.

Land cessions, Indian, in the United States (Royce-Thomas)__A xvm, 521.

Language, Evolution of (Powell) A i, 1.

Philology, or the science of (Powell) A xx, xxxix.

Languages, Indian, Handbook of (Boas, editor) B 40.

Illustration of the method of recording (Dorsey, Gatschet,

Riggs) A i, 579.

Introduction to the study of (Powell) I 1 and 2.

of Mexico and Central America (Thomas-Swanton) B 44.

of the North American Indians, Proof-sheets of a bibliog- raphy of the (Pilling) M 2.

The £Jegiha (Dorsey) C vi.

See Bibliography; Dictionary; Texts.

30

BUREAU OF AMERICAN ETHNOLOGY''

Letters, Omaha and Ponka (Dorsey) B 11.

Lexicology, Comparative, of the Serian and Yuman languages

(Hewitt) A xvin, 299*.

Limitations to the use of some anthropologic data ( Powell) __A i, 71. Linguistic families of America north of Mexico, Indian

(Powell) A vn, 1.

of the Indian tribes north of Mexico (Mooney) M 3.

See Bulletin 44.

Linguistic manuscripts in the library of the Bureau of Eth- nology, Catalogue of (Pilling) A i, 553.

Linguistic stocks north of Mexico, map of (Powell) M 4, 7.

List of publications of the Bureau of American Ethnology B 24, 31, 36, 49,

58 ; A xxviii.

Literature of Hawaii, Unwritten (Emerson) B 38.

Louisiana, Choctaw of Bayou Lacomb, St. Tammany parish

(Bushnell) B 48.

MacCauley, Clay. The Seminole Indians of Florida A v, 469.

McGee, W J. Preface to The Pamunkey Indians of Virginia

(Pollard) B 17.

Prefatory note to the Maya year (Thomas) B 18.

Primitive numbers A xix, 821.

The Seri Indians A xvn, 1.

The Siouan Indians A xv, 153.

and Mufiiz, M. A. Primitive trephining in Peru A xvi, 3.

Maidu language. See Bulletin 40 (pt. 1).

Mallery, Garrick. A collection of gesture signs and signals of

the North American Indians, with some comparisons M 1.

Introduction to the study of sign language among the North American Indians as illustrating the gesture speech of

mankind I 3.

Pictographs of the North American Indians; a preliminary

paper A iv, 3.

Picture-writing of the American Indians A x, 3.

Sign language among North American Indians compared with

that among other peoples and deaf-mutes A i, 263.

Man, early, in North America, Skeletal remains of ( HrdlicTja ) __B 33.

Man, Early, in South America (Hrdlicka and others) B 52.

Manuscripts, linguistic, in the library of the Bureau of Eth- nology, Catalogue of (Pilling) A i, 553.

Notes on certain Maya and Mexican manuscripts ( Thomas) _ A in, 3.

Manuscript Troano, A study of the (Thomas) C v.

Map of linguistic stocks north of Mexico (Powell) M 4, 7.

Masks, labrets, and certain aboriginal customs (Dall) A. in, 67.

Massachusetts. See Natick.

Matthews, Washington. Navajo silversmiths A. n, 167.

Navajo weavers A. in, 371.

The mountain chant: a Navajo ceremony A v, 379.

Maya and Mexican manuscripts, Notes on certain (Thomas) A. in, 3.

Maya codices, Aids to the study of the (Thomas) A vi, 253.

Maya hieroglyphs, An introduction to the study of (Morley)_.B 57.

LIST OF PUBLICATIONS 31

Mayan antiquities, calendar systems, and history ( Forstemann,

Schellhas, Sapper, Seler, Dieseldorff) B 28.

calendar systems (Thomas) A. xix, 693, and

xxn, 197.

Mayas, Graphic system and ancient methods of the (Brinton)_C v (pt.3),xvii.

Maya year (Thomas) B 18.

Day symbols of the (Thomas) A. xvi, 199.

Medical observations among southwestern Indians (Hrdlicka)_B 34.

Medicine-men of the Apache, The (Bourke) A ix, 443.

Menomini Indians, The (Hoffman) A xiv, 3.

Mesa Verde National Park, Antiquities of: Cliff Palace

(Fewkes) B 5L

Spruce-tree House (Fewkes) B 41.

Metals, Use of gold and other, among the ancient inhabitants

of Chiriqui (Holmes) B 3.

Mexican and Central American antiquities and calendar sys- tems (Seler) B 28.

Mexican and Maya manuscripts, Notes on certain (Thomas) __A in, 3. Mexico and Central America, Indian languages of (Thomas-

Swanton) B 44.

Numeral systems of (Thomas) A xrx, 853.

Mexico, eastern, Certain antiquities of (Fewkes) A xxv, 221.

northern, Physiological and medical observations among the

Indians of (HrdliCka) B 34

Michelson, Truman. Preliminary report on the linguistic

classification of Algonquian tribes A xxvin, 181.

See Bulletin 40 (pt 1). Mide'wiwin or " grand medicine society " of the Ojibwa, The

(Hoffman) A vn, 143.

Migration traditions, Tusayan (Fewkes) A xix, 573.

Mindeleff, C. Aboriginal remains in Verde valley, Arizona A xin, 179.

Casa Grande ruin A xin, 289.

Cliff-ruins of Canyon de Chelly, Arizona A xn, 73.

Localization of Tusayan clans A xix, 635.

Navaho houses A xvii, 469.

Repair of Casa Grande ruin in 1891 A xv, 315.

Mindeleff, V. ' A study of pueblo architecture : Tusayan and

Cibola A vm, 3.

Missions, Indian, north of Mexico (Mooney) M 9.

Mississippi valley, Ancient pottery of the (Holmes) A rv, 361.

Animal carvings from mounds of the (Henshaw) A 11, 117.

Lower, Indian tribes of (Swanton) B 43.

Missouri, central and southeastern, Antiquities of (Fowke) B 37.

Mooney, James. Calendar history of the Kiowa Indians A xvn, 129.

Indian missions north of Mexico M 9.

Linguistic families of Indian tribes north of Mexico M 3.

Myths of the Cherokee A. xix, 3.

Sacred formulas of the Cherokees A. vn, 301.

Siouan tribes of the East B 22.

The Ghost-dance religion, with a sketch of the Sioux out- break of 1890 A xrv, 641

Morgan, Lewis H. Houses and house-life of the American

aborigines C iv.

32

BUREAU OF AMERICAN ETHNOLOGY

[BULL. 58

Morley, Sylvanus G. An introduction to the study of the

Maya hieroglyphs JB 57.

Mortuary customs, Introduction to the study of (Yarrow) J 4.

of the North American Indians (Yarrow) A i, 87.

Mound explorations of the Bureau of Ethnology (Thomas) A. xn, 3; B4.

Mounds, Burial, of the northern sections of the United

States (Thomas) A v, 3.

in northern Honduras (Gann) A xix, 655.

of the Mississippi valley, Animal carvings from (Hen-

shaw) A 11,117.

Ohio, The problem of the (Thomas) B 8.

prehistoric, east of the Rocky Mountains, Catalogue of

(Thomas) B 12.

Mountain chant : a Navajo ceremony (Matthews) A. v, 379.

Muniz, M. A., and McGee, W J. Primitive trephining in Peru_A xvi, 3. Murdoch, John. Ethnological results of the Point Barrow

expedition A. ix, 3.

editor. Ethnology of the Ungava district, Hudson Bay

Territory (Turner) A. xi,159.

Music, Chippewa (Densmore) B 45.

Music, Chippewa II (Densmore) B 53.

Muskhogean languages, Bibliography of the (Pilling) B 9.

Mythology of the North American Indians (Powell) A i, 17.

Mythology, Tsimshian (Boas) A xxxi.

Myths :

of the Cherokee (Mooney) A xix,3.

of the Haida (Swanton) B 29.

of the Iroquois (Smith) A 11, 47.

of the Tlingit (Swanton) B 39.

Seneca, and fiction (Curtin and Hewitt) A xxxii.

Zufii creation, Outlines of (Gushing) A; xin, 321.

Natick dictionary (Trumbull), with introduction by Edward

Everett Hale B 25.

Navaho houses (C. Mindeleff) A. xvn,469.

National Monument, Arizona, visit to (Fewkes) B 50.

Navajo ceremony, The mountain chant, a (Matthews) A. v, 379.

Indians, Ceremonial of Hasjelti Dailjis and mythical sand

painting of the (J. Stevenson) A vin, 229.

silversmiths (Matthews) A. n, 167.

weavers (Matthews) A in, 371.

Nelson, E. W. The Eskimo about Bering strait A xvm, 3.

New Mexico, Illustrated catalogue of collections from, in

1879 (J. Stevenson) A n, 307.

in 1880 (J.Stevenson) A n, 423.

in 1881 (J. Stevenson) A m, 511.

Jemez plateau, Antiquities of the (Hewett) B 32.

Rio Grande valley, The physiography of the (Hewett, Hen- derson, and Robbins) B 54.

upper Gila-Salt valleys, Antiquities of the (Hough) B 35.

Northwest, extreme, Tribes of the (Dall) C i, I.

Notes on the natives of Alaska (Furuhelm) C i, 111.

Numbers, Primitive (McGee) A. xix, 821.

LIST OP PUBLICATIONS 33

Numerals, Note on the use of, among the T'sim si-an' (Gibbs)_C i, 155.

Numeral systems of Mexico and Central America (Thomas) A xix, 853.

Ofo, Biloxi-, dictionary ( Dorsey-Swanton ) B 47.

Ohio mounds, The problem of the (Thomas) B 8.

Ohio, The circular, square, and octagonal earthworks of

(Thomas) B 10.

Ojibwa, the Mide'wiwin or " grand medicine society " of the

(Hoffman) A. vn, 143.

See Chippewa.

Omaha and Ponka letters (Dorsey) " R 11.

Omaha dwellings, furniture, and implements (Dorsey) A xm, 263.

sociology (Dorsey) A in, 205.

tribe, The (Fletcher and La Flesche) A xxvn, 17.

Opinions; Sophiology, or the science of (Powell) A xx, clxxi.

Oregon, northwestern, Tribes of (Gibbs) C i, 157.

southwestern, The Klamath Indians of (Gatschet) C n.

Osage traditions (Dorsey) A. vi, 373.

Pamunkey Indians of Virginia (Pollard) B 17.

Pawnee ceremony, The Hako, a (A. C. Fletcher) A xxii.pt. 2, 5.

Perforated stones from California (Henshaw) B 2.

Peru, ancient, Primitive trephining in (Muniz-McGee) A. xvi, 3.

Textile fabrics of (Holmes) B 7.

Philology, or the science of activities designed for expression

(Powell) A xx, cxxxix.

Physiography, The, of the Rio Grande valley, N. Mex., in relation to Pueblo culture (Hewett, Henderson, and

Robbins) B 54.

Physiological and medical observations (HrdliCka) B 34.

Pictographs of the North American Indians (Mallery) A. iv, 3.

Picture-writing of the American Indians (Mallery) A. x, 3.

Studies in Central American (Holden) A i, 205.

Pilling, J. C. Bibliography of the Algonquian languages B 13.

Bibliography of the Athapascan languages _B 14.

Bibliography of the Chinookan languages B 15.

Bibliography of the Eskimo language B 1.

Bibliography of the Iroquoian languages B 6.

Bibliography of the Muskhogean languages B 9.

Bibliography of the Salishan languages B 16.

Bibliography of the Siouan languages B 5.

Bibliography of the Wakashan languages B 19.

Catalogue of linguistic manuscripts in the library of the

Bureau of Ethnology A i, 553.

Proof-sheets of a bibliography of the languages of the North

American Indians M 2.

Pima Indians, The (Russell) A xxvi, 3.

Pleasure; Esthetology, or the science of activities designed

to give (Powell) A xix, Iv.

Point Barrow expedition, Ethnological results of the

(Murdoch) A ix, 3.

Pollard, J. G. The Pamunkey Indians of Virginia B 17.

Ponka and Omaha letters (Dorsey) B 11.

34

[BULL. 58

Porto Rico and neighboring islands, Aborigines of

(Fewkes) A. xxv, 3.

Potomac and James valleys, Archeologic investigations in

(Fowke) B 23.

Potomac-Chesapeake tidewater province, Stone implements

of (Holmes). A xv,3.

Pottery, Aboriginal, of the eastern United States ( Holmes) __A xx, 3.

Ancient, of the Mississippi valley (Holmes) A. iv, 361.

of the ancient Pueblos (Holmes) A. iv, 257.

Prehistoric textile fabrics of the United States, derived

from impressions on (Holmes) A. in, 393.

Pueblo, A study of, as illustrative of Zuni culture growth

(Gushing) A iv,467.

Powell, J. W. Esthetology, or the science of activities de- signed to give pleasure A. xix, Iv.

Indian linguistic families of America north of Mexico A vu, 1.

Introduction to the study of Indian languages, with words,

phrases, and sentences to be collected I 1 and 2.

Map of linguistic stocks of American Indians north of

Mexico M 4, 7.

On activital similarities A in, Ixv.

On limitations to the use of some anthropologic data A i, 71.

On regimentation A xv, civ.

On the evolution of language A. i, 1.

Philology, or the science of activities designed for expres- sion A xx, cxxxix.

Sketch of the mythology of the North American Indians A. i, 17.

Sociology, or the science of institutions A. xx, lix.

Sophiology, or the science of activities designed to give

instruction A xx, clxxl.

Technology, or the science of industries A xx, xxix.

Wyandot government: a short study of tribal society A i,-57.

editor. Linguistics (of the tribes of California) C in, 439.

Powers, Stephen. Tribes of California C in.

Prehistoric trephining and cranial amulets (II. Fletcher) C v.

Primitive numbers (McGee) A xix, 821.

Problem of the Ohio mounds, The (Thomas) B 8.

Proof-sheets of a bibliography of the languages of the North

American Indians (Pilling) M 2.

Publications of the Bureau of American Ethnology, List of___B 24, 31, 36, 49,

58 ; A xxvin, i.

Pueblo architecture: Tusayan and Cibola (V. Mindeleff) A. vin, 3.

culture, The physiography of the Rio Grande valley,

N. Mex., in relation to (Hewett and others) :__.B 54.

pottery as illustrative of Zuni culture growth (dishing) A. iv, 467.

ruins, Two summers' work in (Fewkes) A xxn, pt. 1, 3.

Pueblos, ancient, Pottery of the (Holmes) A. iv, 257.

Quarry, Ancient, in Indian Territory (Holmes) B 21.

Rau, Charles. Observations on cup-shaped and other lapi-

darian sculptures in the Old World and in America C v.

Regimentation (Powell) A xv, cir.

LIST OF PUBLICATIONS

35

Relationship, Terms of, used by the Innuit (Dall) O i, 117.

Religion, Ghost-dance (Mooney) A xiv, 641.

Religious life of the Zufli child (M. C. Stevenson) A v,533.

Rice gatherers of the upper lakes (Jenks) A. xix, 1013.

Riggs, Stephen R. Dakota-English dictionary O vn.

Dakota grammar, texts, and ethnography C ix.

Illustration of the method of recording Indian languages A i, 579.

Rio Grande valley, N. Mex., The physiography of the (Hew-

et, Henderson, and Robbins) B 54.

Robbing, Wilfred W., and others. Ethnobotany of the Tewa

Indians . B 55.

and others. The physiography of the Rio Grande valley,

N. Mex B 54.

Roth, Walter E. An inquiry into the animism and folk-lore

of the Guiana Indians A xxx.

Royce, C. C. Cessions of lands by Indian tribes to the United States: illustrated by those in the State of

Indiana A i, 247.

Indian land cessions in the United States A xvm, 521.

The Cherokee nation of Indians A v, 121.

Ruin, Casa Grande (C. Mindeleff) A xin, 289.

Repair of, in 1891 (C. Mindeleff) A xv,315.

See Twenty-eighth anual report.

Ruins, Cliff, of Canyon de Chelly (C. Mindeleff) A xvi, 73.

pueblo, Two summers' work in (Fewkes) A xxn.pt. 1,3.

Russell, Frank. The Pima Indians A. xxvi, 3.

Sacred formulas of the Cherokees (Mooney) A vn, 301.

Salishan languages, Bibliography of the (Pilling) B 16.

Salt, upper Gila-, valleys, Antiquities of the (Hough) .B 35.

Sand painting of the Navajo Indians, Mythical (J. Steven-

son) A viii, 229.

Sapper, Carl, and others. Mayan antiquities, calendar sys- tems, and history J5 28.

Schellhas, Paul, and others. Mayan antiquities, calendar

systems, and history B 28.

Sculptures, cup-shaped and other lapidarian, Observations

on (Rau) C v, 1.

Seler, Eduard, and others. Mexican and Central American

antiquities, calendar systems, and history B 28.

Seminole Indians of Florida, The (MacCauley) A v, 469.

Seneca myths and fiction, collected by Jeremiah Curtin and

J. N. B. Hewitt (edited by J. N. B. Hewitt) A xxxn.

Serian and Yuman languages, Comparative lexicology of

( Hewitt) A xvn, 299*.

Seri Indians, The (McGee) A xvn, 1.

Shell, Art in, of the ancient Americans (Holmes) A n, 179.

Sia, The (M. C. Stevenson) A xi,3.

Sign language among North American Indians (Mallery) A i, 263.

Introduction to the study of (Mallery) I 3.

Signals, gesture-signs and, of the North American Indians

(Mallery) M 1.

36

BUREAU OF AMERICAN ETHNOLOGY

[BULL. 58

Silversmiths, Navajo (Matthews) A n, 167.

Similarities, activital (Powell) A in, Ixv.

Siouan cults, A study of (Dorsey) A xi, 351.

Indians, The (McGee) A xv, 153.

languages, Bibliography of the (Pilling) B 5.

See Bulletin 40 (pt. 1).

sociology (Dorsey) A xv, 205.

tribes of the East (Mooney) B 22.

Sioux outbreak of 1890 (Mooney) A xiv, G41.

Skeletal material from Missouri (Hrdli£ka) B 37.

remains suggesting or attributed to early man in North

America (Hrdlidka) B 33.

Smith, Erminnie A. Myths of the Iroquois ! A n, 47.

Snake and Flute ceremonies, Tusayan (Fewkes) A xix, 957.

Snake ceremonies, Tusayan (Fewkes) A xvi, 2G7.

Sociology, Omaha (Dorsey) A in, 250.

or the science of institutions (Powell) A xx, lix.

Siouan (Dorsey) A, xv, 205.

Sophiology, or the science of activities designed to give in- struction (Powell) A xx, clxxi.

South America, Early man in (Hrdlicka and others) B 52.

Spruce-tree House, Mesa Verde National Park (Fewkes) B 41.

Stevenson, James. Ceremonial of Hasjelti Dailjis and myth- ical sand painting of the Navajo Indians A vm, 229.

Illustrated catalogue of collections obtained from the

Indians of New Mexico and Arizona in 1879 A n, 307.

Illustrated catalogue of collections obtained from the

Indians of New Mexico in 1880 A n, 423.

Illustrated catalogue of collections obtained from the pueblos of Zufii, New Mexico, and Wolpi, Arizona, in

1881 A. m,511.

Stevenson, Matilda C. Ethnobotany of the Zufii Indians A. xxx, 29.

The religious life of the Zufii child A v, 533.

The Sia A xi, 3.

The Zufii Indians, their mythology, esoteric fraternities,

and ceremonies A, xxm, 3.

Stevenson, Tilly E. See Stevenson, Matilda O.

Stone art (Fowke) A xin, 47

Stone implements of the Potomac-Chesapeake tidewater

province (Holmes) A xv, 3.

Stones, Perforated, from California (Henshaw) B 2.

Studies in Central American picture writing (Holdeu) A I, 205.

Study of Pueblo architecture, A (V. Mindeleff) A vm,3.

of Siouan cults, A (Dorsey) A. xi, 351.

of the manuscript Troano, A (Thomas) C v.

Swanton, J. R., Haida texts and myths B 29.

Indian tribes of the lower Mississippi Valley and adjacent

coast of the Gulf of Mexico B 43.

Tlingit Indians, The A. xxvi, 391.

Tlingit myths and texts B 39.

and Dorsey, James Owen. Biloxi-Ofo dictionary B 47-

and Thomas, Cyrus. Indian languages of Mexico and Cen- tral America B 44.

editor. Choctaw dictionary (Byington) B 46.

See Bulletin 40 (pt. 1).

LIST OF PUBLICATIONS

37

Symbols, Day, of the Maya year (Thomas) A. xvi, 199.

Synonymy, Skittagetan (Henshaw) M 5.

Technology, or the science of industries (Powell) A. xx, xxix.

Tewa Indians, Ethnogeography of the (Harrington) A. xxix, 29.

Ethnobotany of the (Robbins, Harrington, and Freire-Mar-

reco) ^ B 55.

Ethnozoology of the (Henderson-Harrington) B 56.

Textile art, Form and ornament in (Holmes) A vi, 189.

Prehistoric, of eastern United States (Holmes) A xm, 3.

Textile fabrics of ancient Peru (Holmes) B 7.

Prehistoric, of the United States (Holmes) A in, 393.

Texts :

Biloxi (Dorsey-Swanton) B 47.

Chinook (Boas) B 20.

grammar, and ethnography, Dakota (Riggs) C ix.

Haida (Swanton) B 29.

Kathlamet (Boas) B 26.

Tlingit (Swanton) JS 39.

Tsimshian (Boas) & 27.

Thalbitzer, William. See Bulletin 40 (pt. 1).

Thomas, Cyrus. Aids to the study of the Maya codices A vi, 253.

A study of the manuscript Troano C v.

Burial mounds of the northern sections of the United

States A v, 3.

Catalogue of prehistoric works east of the Rocky Moun- tains B 12.

Day symbols of the Maya year A xvi, 199.

Introduction to Indian land cessions (Royce) A xvin, 521.

Mayan calendar systems A xix, 693, and

xxn, pt. 1,197.

Notes on certain Maya and Mexican manuscripts A in, 3.

Numeral systems of Mexico and Central America A. xix, 853.

Report on the mound explorations of the Bureau of Eth- nology A. xn, 3.

The circular, square, and octagonal earthworks of Ohio B 10.

The Maya year B 18.

The problem of the Ohio mounds B 8.

Work in mound exploration of the Bureau of Ethnology B 4.

and Swanton. Indian languages of Mexico and Central

America B 44.

Tlingit Indians, The (Swanton) A xxvi. 391.

language. See Bulletin 40 (pt. 1).

myths and texts (Swanton) B 39.

Traditions, Osage (Dorsey) A vi, 373.

Tusayan migration (Fewkes) A xix, 573.

Trephining, Prehistoric, and cranial amulets (R. Fletcher) C v.

Primitive, in Peru (Muniz-McGee) A. xvi, 3.

Tribal society; Wyandot government; A short study of

(Powell) A i. 57.

Tribes, certain Indian, of the United States, Tuberculosis

among (HrdlicTta) B 42.

38

BUREAU OF AMERICAN ETHNOLOGY

[BULL,. 58

Tribes of California (Powers) C in, 1.

of North America, with synonymy. Skittagetan family

' (Henshaw) M 5.

of the extreme northwest (Dall) C i, 1.

of the lower Mississippi Valley and adjacent coast of the

Gulf of Mexico (Swanton) 15 43.

of western Washington and northwestern Oregon (Gibbs)__C i, 157.

Troano manuscript, A study of the (Thomas) C v.

Trnmbull, J. II. Natick dictionary B 25.

Tsimshian language. See Bulletin 40 (pt. 1).

mythology (Boas) A xxxi.

texts (Boas) B 27.

T'sim si-an', Note on the use of numerals among the (Gibbs)_C i, 155. Tuberculosis among certain Indian tribes of U. S. (Hrdlicka)-B 42. Turner, Lucien M. Ethnology of the Ungava district, Hud- son Bay territory A xi, 159.

Tusayan and Cibola, architecture of (V. Mindeleff) A vm, 3.

Tusayan clans, Localization of (C. Mindeleff) A xix, G35.

Flute and Snake ceremonies (Fewkes) A xix, 957.

katcinas (Fewkes) A xv, 245.

migration traditions (Fewkes) A xix, 573.

Snake ceremonies (Fewkes) A xvi, 267.

Ungava district, Ethnology of the (Turner) A xi, 159.

Upper lakes, Wild-rice gatherers of the (Jenks) A xix, 1013.

Verde (upper) river and Walnut creek valleys, Arizona,

Antiquities of (Fewkes) . A. xxvin, 181.

Verde valley, Aboriginal remains in (C. Mindeleff) A xm, 179.

Virginia, The Pamunkey Indians of (Pollard) B 17.

Vocabularies of tribes of the extreme northwest (Gibbs-

Dall) C i, 121.

See Bibliography ; Dictionary ; Languages ; Linguistic ; Texta

Wakashan languages, Bibliography of the (Pilling) B 19.

Walnut creek and upper Verde river valleys, Arizona,

Antiquities of (Fewkes) A xxvm, 181.

Washington, western, Tribes of (Gibbs) C i, 157.

Weavers, Navajo (Matthews) ! A in, 371.

Welfare; Technology, or the science of activities designed

for (Powell) A xx, xxix.

West Indies. See Porto Rico.

Wild-rice gatherers of the upper lakes (Jenks) A xix, 1013.

Willis, Bailey (collaborator). Early man in South America.B 52.

Winship, G. P. The Coronado expedition, 1540-1542 A xiv, 329.

Wolpi, Arizona, Illustrated catalogue of collections from, in

1881 (J. Stevenson) A m, 511.

Wright, Fred. E. (collaborator). Early man in South Amer- ica B 52.

Wyandot government : A short study of tribal society

(Powell) A i, 57.

LIST OF PUBLICATIONS 39

Yarrow, H. C. A further contribution to the study of the

mortuary customs of the North American Indians A i, 87.

Introduction to the study of mortuary customs among the

North American Indians I 4.

Yuman and Serian languages, Comparative lexicology of

(Hewitt) A xvn, 299*.

Zuni child, The religious life of the (T. E. Stevenson) A v, 538.

creation myths, Outlines of (Cushing) A xin, 321.

culture growth, Pueblo pottery as illustrative of (Cush- ing) A. iv, 467.

fetiches (Cushing) A ir, 3.

Zuni Indians (M. C. Stevenson) A. xxm, 3.

Ethnobotany of the (M. C. Stevenson) A xxx, 29.

Zuni, New Mexico, Illustrated catalogue of collections from,

in 1881 (J. Stevenson) A. in, 511.

See Cibola; Coronado.

o

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