prea a nee er ae neha Spagna “ i. all ra Re ae Pag) iVYait LIBRARIES SMITHSONIAN INSTITUTION NOILNLILSNI_ NVINOSHLINS S31YVYEIT LIBRARIES SMITHSONIAN N\ Sh N\ N\ Sh Nv SN Nt NS TITUS % Oo \ v o = 9 © TUTION NOILNLILSNI NVINOSHLINS S314¥VYEIT LIBRARIES Ms Soe = wo = wo => w” 4 w = STITUTE 4 as J = us & ul a us Uj, a C Wy a ce ze o = ac = a Gil, 3 5 ro x A < co aie - ’ ei ‘4 , — » a Ba v Pio OF PUBLICATIONS OF THE BUREAU OF “AMERICAN ETHNOLOGY ANNUAL REPORTS (In royal octavo size) First annual report of the Bureau of Ethnology to the Secretary of the Smithsonian Institution, 1879-80, by J. W. Powell, Director. xxxv+ 603 pp., 346 figs. (incl. 54 pls.), map. 1881. Out of print. Report of the Director. Pp. x1-xxxmi. On the evolution of language, as exhibited in the specialization of the gram- matic processes, the differentiation of the parts of speech, and the integration of the sentence; from a study of Indian languages, by J. W. Powell. Pp. 1-16. Sketch of the mythology of the North American Indians, by J. W. Powell. Pp. 17-56. Wyandot government: A short study of tribal society, by J. W. Powell. Pp. 57-69. On limitations to the use of some anthropologic data, by J. W. Powell. Pp. 71-86. Available in separate form. A further contribution to the study of the mortuary customs of the North Amer- ican Indians, by Dr. H. C. Yarrow, act. asst. surg., U.S. A[rmy]. Pp. 87-203, figs. 1-47. Studies in Central American picture-writing, by Edward S. Holden, professor of mathematics, U. S. Naval Observatory. Pp. 205-245, figs. 48-60. Cessions of land by Indian tribes to the United States: Illustrated by those in the State of Indiana, by C. C. Royce. Pp. 247-262, map. Sign language among North American Indians compared with that among other peoples and deaf-mutes, by Garrick Mallery. Pp. 263-552, figs. 61-346. Catalogue of linguistic manuscripts in the library of the Bureau of Ethnology, by James C. Pilling. Pp. 553-577. Illustration of the method of recording Indian languages. From the manuscripts of Messrs. J. O. Dorsey, A. 8. Gatschet, and 8. R. Riggs. Pp. 579-589. Index. Pp. 591-603. Second annual report of the Bureau of Ethnology to the Secretary of the Smithsonian Institution, 1880-81, by J. W. Powell, Director. xxxvi1+477 pp., 77 pls., figs. 1-85, 347-714 (382 of these forming 98 pls.), 2 maps. 1883 [1884]. Out of print. Report of the Director. Pp. xv-xxxvil. Zuii fetiches, by Frank Hamilton Cushing. Pp. 3-45, pls. 1—x1, figs. 1-3. Myths of the Iroquois, by Erminnie A. Smith. Pp. 47-116, pls. x1—xv. Animal carvings from mounds of the Mississippi valley, by Henry W. Henshaw. Pp. 117-166, figs. 4-35. 1 2 BUREAU OF AMERICAN ETHNOLOGY Navajo silversmiths, by Dr. Washington Matthews, U.S. A[rmy]. Pp. 167-178, pls. xvI-xx. Art in shell of the ancient Americans, by William H. Holmes. Pp. 179-305, pls. XxXI-LXXVII. Illustrated catalogue of the collections obtained from the Indians of New Mexico and Arizona in 1879, by James Stevenson. Pp. 307-422, figs. 347-697, map. Illustrated catalogue of the collections obtained from the Indians of New Mexico in 1880, by James Stevenson. Pp. 423-465, figs. 698-714, map. Index. Pp. 467-477. Third annual report of the Bureau of Ethnology to the Secretary of the Smithsonian Institution, 1881-82, by J. W. Powell, Director. txx1v-+ 606 pp., 44 pls., 200 (+2 unnumbered) figs. 1884 [1885]. Oud of print. Report of the Director. Pp. x1m—Lxx1v. On activital similarities. Pp. Lxv—-LxxIv. Notes on certain Maya and Mexican manuscripts, by Prof. Cyrus Thomas. Pp. 3-65, pls. 1-1v, figs. 1-10. On masks, labrets, and certain aboriginal customs, with an inquiry into the bearing of their geographical distribution, by William Healey Dall, assistant, U. S. Coast Survey; honorary curator, U.S. National Museum. Pp. 67-202, pls. v-xx1x. Available in separate form, Omaha sociology, by Rev. J. Owen Dorsey. Pp. 205-370, pls. xxx—xxxm, figs. 12-42. Navajo weavers, by Dr. Washington Matthews, U. 8. A(rmy]. Pp. 371-391, pls. XxxIv-xxxvitl, figs. 42-59. Prehistoric textile fabrics of the United States, derived from impressions on pottery, by William H. Holmes. Pp. 393-425, pl. xxxix, figs. 60-115. Illustrated catalogue of a portion of the collections made by the Bureau of Eth- nology during the field season of 1881, by William H. Holmes. Pp. 427-510, figs. 116-200. Illustrated catalogue of the collections obtained from the pueblos of Zuni, New Mexico, and Wolpi, Arizona, in 1881, by James Stevenson. Pp. 511-594, pls. XL-xXLIV. Available in separate form. Index. Pp. 595-606. Fourth Annual report of the Bureau of Ethnology to the Secretary of the Smithsonian Institution, 1882-83, by J. W. Powell, Director. .Lx1I+ 532 pp., 83 pls., 565 figs. 1886 [1887]. Out of print. Report of the Director. Pp. xxviI-Lx111. Pictographs of the North American Indians. A preliminary paper, by Garrick Mallery. Pp. 3-256, pls. 1-uxxxiu, figs. 1-111, 111la—209. Pottery of the ancient Pueblos, by William H. Holmes. Pp. 257-360, figs. 210-360. Ancient pottery of the Mississippi Valley, by William H. Holmes. Pp. 361- 436, figs. 361-463. Origin and development of form and ornament in ceramic art, by William H. Holmes. Pp. 437-465, figs. 464-489. A study of Pueblo pottery as illustrative of Zufi culture-growth, by Frank Hamilton Cushing. Pp. 467-521, figs. 490-564. Index. Pp. 523a-532. LIST OF PUBLICATIONS = Fifth annual report of the Bureau of Ethnology to the Secretary of the Smithsonian Institution, 1883-84, by J. W. Powell, Director. Lu1-+ 564 pp., 23 pls. (incl. 2 maps), 77 figs. 1887 [1888]. Oud of print. Report of the Director. Pp. xvi—uim1. Burial mounds of the northern sections of the United States, by Prof. Cyrus Thomas. Pp. 3-119, pls. 1-v1, figs. 1-49. The Cherokee Nation of Indians: A narrative of their official relations with the Colonial and Federal governments, by Charles C. Royce. Pp. 121-378, pls. viI-Ix (maps). The mountain chant: A Navajo ceremony, by Dr. Washington Matthews, U.S. Alrmy]. Pp. 379-467, pls. x—xvim, figs. 50-59. The Seminole Indians of Florida, by Clay MacCauley. Pp. 469-531, pl. xrx, figs. 60-77. The religious life of the Zui child, by Mrs. Tilly E. Stevenson. Pp. 533-555, pls. xxX—xXxIII. Index. Pp. 557-564. Sixth annual report of the Bureau of Ethnology to the Secretary of the Smithsonian Institution, 1884-85, by J. W. Powell, Director. Lv11m+ 675 pp. (incl. 6 pp. of music), 10 pls. (incl. 3 maps), 546 figs., 44 small unnumbered cuts. 1888 [1889]. Out of print. Report of the Director. Pp. xxI-Lvimt. Ancient art of the province of Chiriqui, Colombia, by William H. Holmes. Pp. 3-187, pl. 1 (map), figs. 1-285. A study of the textile art in its relation to the development of form and ornament, by William H. Holmes. Pp. 189-252, figs. 286-358. Aids to the study of the Maya codices, by Prof. Cyrus Thomas. Pp. 253-371, figs. 359-388. Osage traditions, by Rev. J. Owen Dorsey. Pp. 373-397, fig. 389. The Central Eskimo, by Dr. Franz Boas. Pp. 399-669, pls. 11—x (incl. 2 maps), figs. 390-546. Index. Pp. 671-675. Seventh annual report of the Bureau of Ethnology to the Secretary of the Smithsonian Institution, 1885-86, by J. W. Powell, Director. xiuI+ 409 pp., 27 pls. (incl. map), 39 figs. 1891 [1892]. Out of print. Report of the Director. Pp. xv—x1t1. Indian linguistic families of America north of Mexico, by J. W. Powell. Pp. 1-142, pl. 1 (map). The Midé’wiwin or ‘Grand Medicine Society” of the Ojibwa, by W. J. Hoffman. Pp. 143-300, pls. u—xxum1, figs. 1-39. The sacred formulas of the Cherokees, by James Mooney. Pp. 301-397, pls. XXIV-XXVII. Index. Pp. 399-409. Eighth annual report of the Bureau of Ethnology to the Secretary of the Smithsonian Institution, 1886-87, by J. W. Powell, Director. xxxvi+ 298 pp., 123 pls., 118 figs. 1891 [1893]. Oud of print. Report of the Director. Pp. x11I-xxxv1. 4 BUREAU OF AMERICAN ETHNOLOGY A study of Pueblo architecture: Tusayan and Cibola, by Victor Mindeleff. Pp. 3-228, pls. 1-cx1, figs. 1-114. Ceremonial of Hasjelti Dailjis and mythical sand painting of the Navajo Indians, by James Stevenson. Pp. 229-285, pls. cxu—cxx1m, figs. 115-118. Index. Pp. 287-298. Ninth annual report of the Bureau of Ethnology to the Secretary of the Smithsonian Institution, 1887-88, by J. W. Powell, Director. xtvi+ 617 pp., 8 pls., 448 figs. 1892 [1893]. Out of print. Report of the Director. Pp. xrx—x.v1. Ethnological results of the Point Barrow Expedition, by John Murdoch, naturalist and observer, International Polar Expedition to Point Barrow, Alaska, 1881- 1883. Pp. 3-441, pls. 1-11 (maps), figs. 1-428. The medicine-men of the Apache, by John G. Bourke, Captain, Third Cavalry, U.S. Army. Pp. 443-603, pls. m—vit, figs. 429-448. Index. Pp. 605-617. Tenth annual report of the Bureau of Ethnology to the Secretary of the Smithsonian Institution, 1888-89, by J. W. Powell, Director. xxx-+ 822 pp., 54 pls., 1291 figs., 116 small unnumbered cuts. 1893 [1894]. Out of print. Report of the Director. Pp. m1-xxx. Picture-writing of the American Indians, by Garrick Mallery. Pp. 3-807, pls. I-LIVv, figs. 1-145, 145a—-1290. Index. Pp. 809-822. Eleventh annual report of the Bureau of Ethnology to the Secretary of the Smithsonian Institution, 1889-90, by J. W. Powell, Director. XLVv1I+553 pp., 50 pls., 200 figs. 1894. Out of print. Report of the Director. Pp. xxI—xLvi. The Sia, by Matilda Coxe Stevenson. Pp. 3-157, pls. 1-xxxv, figs. 1-20. Ethnology of the Ungava District, Hudson Bay Territory, by Lucien M. Turner. [Edited by John Murdoch.] Pp. 159-350, pls. xxxvi—xim1, figs. 21-155. A study of Siouan cults, by James Owen Dorsey. Pp. 351-544, pls. xL1v-t, figs. 156-200. Index. Pp. 545-553. Twelfth annual report of the Bureau of Ethnology to the Secretary of the Smithsonian Institution, 1890-91, by J. W. Powell, Director. XLVIII+742 pp., 42 pls., 344 figs. 1894. Report of the Director. Pp. xrx—x.vill. Report on the mound explorations of the Bureau of Ethnology, by Cyrus Thomas. Pp. 3-730. Index. Pp. 731-742. Out of print. Thirteenth annual report of the Bureau of Ethnology to the Secretary of the Smithsonian Institution, 1891-92, by J. W. Powell, Director. LIx+462 pp., 60 pls., 330 figs. 1896. Out of print. Report of the Director. Pp. xrx—.ix. LIST OF PUBLICATIONS 5 Prehistoric textile art of Eastern United States, by William Henry Holmes. Pp. 3-46, pls. 1-1x, figs. 1-28. Stone art, by Gerard Fowke. Pp. 47-178, figs. 29-278. Aboriginal remains in Verde Valley, Arizona, by Cosmos Mindeleff. Pp. 179-261, pls. x-t, figs. 279-305. Omaha dwellings, furniture, and implements, by James Owen Dorsey. Pp. 263- 288, figs. 306-327. Casa Grande ruin, by Cosmos Mindeleff. Pp. 289-319, pls. Li-Lx, figs. 328-330. Outlines of Zufi creation myths, by Frank Hamilton Cushing. Pp. 321-447, Index. Pp. 449-462. Fourteenth annual report of the Bureau of Ethnology to the Secretary of the Smithsonian Institution, 1892-93, by J. W. Powell, Director. Two parts. LxI+1136 pp., 122 pls., 104 figs. 1896 [1897]. Oud of print. Part 1: Report of the Director. Pp. xxv-1Lx1. The Menomini Indians, by Walter James Hoffman, M. D. Pp. 3-328, pls. I-xXxxvIl, figs. 1-55. The Coronado Expedition, 1540-1542, by George Parker Winship. Pp. 329- 613, pls. XXxXVIII-LXxXXIV. Index. Pp. 615-637. Part 2: The Ghost-dance religion and the Sioux outbreak of 1890, by James Mooney, Pp. 641-1110, pls. Lxxxv—cxxu, figs. 56-104. Index. Pp. 1111-1136. Fifteenth annual report of the Bureau of Ethnology to the Secretary of the Smithsonian Institution, 1893-94, by J. W. Powell, Director. cxx1+366 pp., frontispiece, 125 pls., 49 figs. 1897. Oud of print. Report of the Director. Pp. xv—cxx1. On regimentation. Pp. clv—cxx1. Stone implements of the Potomac-Chesapeake tidewater province, by William Henry Holmes. Pp. 3-152, pls. 1-cim and frontispiece, figs. 1-29a. The Siouan Indians: A preliminary sketch, by W J McGee. Pp. 153-204. Siouan sociology: A posthumous paper, by James Owen Dorsey. Pp. 205-244, figs. 30-38. Tusayan katcinas, by Jesse Walter Fewkes. Pp. 245-313, pls. crv—cx1, figs. 39-48. The repair of Casa Grande ruin, Arizona, in 1891, by Cosmos Mindeleff. Pp. 315-349, pls. cxlI-cxxv. Index. Pp. 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. cx1x+326 pp., 81 pls., 83 figs. 1897. Out of print. Report of the Director. Pp. xmi—cxrx. List of publications of the Bureau of American Ethnology. Pp. ci—cxrx. Primitive trephining in Peru, by Manuel Antonio Muiiiz, M. D., and W J McGee. Pp. 3-72, pls. 1-x.. 6 BUREAU OF AMERICAN ETHNOLOGY The cliff ruins of Canyon de Chelly, Arizona, by Cosmos Mindeleff. Pp. 73-198, pls. xuI-Lxu11, figs. 1-83. Day symbols of the Maya year, by Cyrus Thomas. Pp. 199-265, pls. Lx1v—Lxrx. Tusayan snake ceremonies, by Jesse Walter Fewkes. Pp. 267-312, pls. txx- LXXXI. Index. Pp. 313-326. Seventeenth annual report of the Bureau of American Ethnology to the Secretary of the Smithsonian Institution, 1895-96, by J. W. Powell, Director. Two parts, xci1I+1-128, 129*-344*, 129-468; 469-752 pp., 182 pls., 357 figs. 1898 [part 1, 1900; part 2, 1901]. Out of print. Part 1: Report of the Director. Pp. xxv—xciiI. List of publications of the Bureau of American Ethnology. Pp. txxv- XCII. The Seri Indians, by W J McGee. Pp. 1-128, 129*-344*, pls. 1-Lv1, figs. 1-42. Comparative lexicology, by J. N. B. Hewitt. Pp. 299*-344*. Calendar history of the Kiowa Indians, by James Mooney. Pp. 129-445, pls. LVII-LXXXI, figs. 43-229. Index. Pp. 447-468. Part 2: Navaho houses, by Cosmos Mindeleff. Pp. 469-517, pls. txxxm-—xc, figs. 230-244. Archeological expedition to Arizona in 1895, by Jesse Walter Fewkes. Pp. 519-744, pls. xcia, xcib-cLxxv, figs. 245-357. Index. Pp. 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. Two parts, Lvi1+1-518; 519-997 pp., 174 pls., 165 figs. 1899 [part 1, 1901, part 2, 1902]. Oud of print. Part 1: Report of the Director. Pp. xxmI-Lvil. The Eskimo about Bering Strait, by Edward William Nelson. Pp. 3-518, pls. 1-cvn, figs. 1-165. Part 2: Indian land cessions in the United States, compiled by Charles C. Royce, with an introduction by Cyrus Thomas. Pp. 521-964, pls. cvmi—cLxxIv. Index to parts 1 and 2. Pp. 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. Two parts, xcii+1—568, 569*-576*; 569-1160 pp., frontis- piece, 79 pls., 49 figs. 1900 [1902]. Out of print. Part 1: Report of the Director. Pp. 1x-xcn, frontispiece. Esthetology, or the science of activities designed to give pleasure. Pp. LV—XCII. Myths of the Cherokee, by James Mooney. Pp. 3-548, pls. 1-xx, figs. 1-2. Index. Pp. 549-568, 549*-576*. LIST OF PUBLICATIONS ff Part 2: Tusayan migration traditions, by Jesse Walter Fewkes. Pp. 573-633. Localization of Tusayan clans, by Cosmos Mindeleff. Pp. 635-653, pls. xx1- xxviul, fig. 3. (Available in separate form.) Mounds in northern Honduras, by Thomas Gann. Pp. 655-692, pls. xxrx- XXxXIx, figs. 4-7. Mayan calendar systems, by Cyrus Thomas. Pp. 693-819, pls. xL-xuitra, xuiub, xiv, figs. 8-17a, 17b-22. Primitive numbers, by W J McGee. Pp. 821-851. Available in separate form. Numeral systems of Mexico and Central America, by Cyrus Thomas. Pp. 853-955, figs. 23-41. Available in separate form. Tusayan Flute and Snake ceremonies, by Jesse Walter Fewkes. Pp. 957- 1011, pls. xLv-Lxv, figs. 42-46. The wild-rice gatherers of the upper lakes: A study in American primitive economics, by Albert Ernest Jenks. Pp. 1013-1137, pls. txvi-Lxxix, figs. 47-48. Index. Pp. 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. ccxx1v-+237 pp., 180 pls., 79 figs. 1903. Out of print. Report of the Director. Pp. vii—ccxxiv. Technology, or the science of industries. Pp. xxrx-Ltvu. Available in separate form. Sociology, or the science of institutions. Pp. trx-cxxxvimt. Available in separate form. Philology, or the science of activities designed for expression. Pp. cxxxix- cLxx. Available in separate form. Sophiology, or the science of activities designed to give instruction. Pp. cLxxiI-cxcvi. Available in separate form. List of publications of the Bureau of American Ethnology. Pp. cxcrx- CCXXIV. Aboriginal pottery of the eastern United States, by W. H. Holmes. Pp. 1-201, pls. 1-cLxxvil, figs. 1-79. Index. Pp. 203-237. Twenty-first annual report of the Bureau of American Ethnology to the Secretary of the Smithsonian Institution, 1899-1900, by J. W. Powell, Director. xuL+360 pp., 69 pls. 1903. Out of print. Report of the Director. Pp. vi—xu, pl. 1 (map). Hopi katcinas, drawn by native artists, by Jesse Walter Fewkes. Pp. 3-126, pls. 11—-Lxm1. Troquoian cosmology, by J. N. B. Hewitt. First part. Pp. 127-339, pls. ux1v— LXIX. Index. Pp. 341-360. Twenty-second annual report of the Bureau of American Ethnology to the Secretary of the Smithsonian Institution, 1900-1901, J. W. Powell, Director. Two parts, xLIv-+1-320; 1-372 pp., 91 pls., 181 figs. 1904. Out of print. 8 BUREAU OF AMERICAN ETHNOLOGY Part 1: Report of the Director. Pp. vi-xtiv. Two summers’ work in pueblo ruins, by Jesse Walter Fewkes. Pp. 3-195, pls. 1-Lxx, figs. 1-122. Mayan calendar systems—II, by Cyrus Thomas. Pp. 197-305, pls. txx1- Lxxxu, figs. 123-170. Available in separate form. Index. Pp. 307-320. Part 2: The Hako: A Pawnee ceremony, by Alice C. Fletcher (assisted by James R. Murie; music transcribed by Edwin §. Tracy). Pp. 5-368, pls. txxxmi— xcl, figs. 171-181. Index. Pp. 369-372. Twenty-third annual report of the Bureau of American Ethnology to the Secretary of the Smithsonian Institution, 1901-2, J. W. Powell, Di- rector. XLV+634 pp., 139 pls., 34 figs. 1904 [1905]. Out of print. Report of the Director. Pp. vu—xtyv. The Zuni Indians: Their mythology, esoteric fraternities, and ceremonies, by Matilda Coxe Stevenson. Pp. 3-608. Index. Pp. 609-634. Twenty-fourth annual report of the Bureau of American Ethnology to the Secretary of the Smithsonian Institution, 1902-3, W. H. Holmes, Chief. xL+846 pp., 21 pls., 1112 figs. 1907. Oud of print. Report of the Chief. Pp. vi—xt. Games of the North American Indians, by Stewart Culin. Pp. 3-809. Index. Pp. 811-846. Twenty-fifth annual report of the Bureau of American Ethnology to the Secretary of the Smithsonian Institution, 1903-4. xxrx+296 pp., 129 pls., 70 figs. 1907. Oud of print. Report of the Chief [W. H. Holmes]. Pp. 1v—xxrx. The aborigines of Porto Rico and neighboring islands, by Jesse Walter Fewkes. Pp. 3-220, pls. 1-xc1u1, figs. 1-43. Certain antiquities of eastern Mexico, by Jesse Walter Fewkes. Pp. 221-284, pls. xciv—cxxix, figs. 44-70. Index. Pp. 285-296. Twenty-sixth annual report of the Bureau of American Ethnology to the Secretary of the Smithsonian Institution, 1904-5. xxx1+512 pp., 58 pls., 117 figs. 1908. Out of print. Report of the Chief [W. H. Holmes]. Pp. vu—xxx1. The Pima Indians, by Frank Russell. Pp. 3-389, pls. i-xivu, figs. 1-102. Social condition, beliefs, and linguistic relationship of the Tlingit Indians, by John R. Swanton. Pp. 391-485, pls. xivii—Lvim, figs. 103-117. Index. Pp. 487-512. Twenty-seventh annual report of the Bureau of American Ethnology to the Secretary of the Smithsonian Institution, 1905-6. 672 pp., 65 pls., 132 figs. 1911. Out of print. LIST OF PUBLICATIONS 9 Report of the Chief [W. H. Holmes]. Pp. 5-14. The Omaha tribe, by Alice C. Fletcher and Francis La Flesche. Pp. 17-654. Index. Pp. 655-672. Twenty-eighth annual report of the Bureau of American Ethnology to the Secretary of the Smithsonian Institution, 1906-7. 308+xxxv pp., 103 pls., 68 figs. 1912. Report of the Chief [W. H. Holmes]. Pp. 7-22. Casa Grande, Arizona, by Jesse Walter Fewkes. Pp. 25-179, pls. 1-78, figs. 1-54. Antiquities of the upper Verde River and Walnut Creek valleys, Arizona, by Jesse Walter Fewkes. Pp. 181-220, pls. 79-102, figs. 55-68. Preliminary report on the linguistic classification of Algonquian tribes, by Truman Michelson. Pp. 221—290b, pl. 103 (map). (Available in separate form.) Index. Pp. 291-308. List of publications of the Bureau of American Ethnology. Pp. 1-xxxyv. Twenty-ninth annual report of the Bureau of American Ethnology to the Secretary of the Smithsonian Institution, 1907-8. 636 pp., 21 pls., 31 maps, 1 diagram. 1916. Report of the Chief [W. H. Holmes]. Pp. 7-25. The ethnogeography of the Tewa Indians, by John Peabody Harrington. Pp. 29-618, pls. 1-21, maps 1-29A-380, diagram 1. Index. Pp. 619-636. Thirtieth annual report of the Bureau of American Ethnology to the Secretary of the Smithsonian Institution, 1908-9. 453 pp., 7 pls., 6 figs. 1915. Out of print. Report of the Chief [W. H. Holmes]. Pp. 7-28. Ethnobotany of the Zufi Indians, by Matilda Coxe Stevenson. Pp. 31-102, pls. 1-3. An inquiry into the animism, and folk-lore of the Guiana Indians, by Walter E. Roth. Pp. 103-386, pls. 4-7, figs. 1-6. List of publications of the Bureau of American Ethnology. Pp. 387-425. Index. Pp. 427-453. Thirty-first annual report of the Bureau of American Ethnology to the Secretary of the Smithsonian Institution, 1909-10. 1037 pp., 3 pls., 24 figs. 1916. Report of the Ethnologist-in-charge [F. W. Hodge]. Pp. 5-26. Tsimshian mythology, by Franz Boas. Pp. 29-1037. Thirty-second annual report of the Bureau of American Ethnology to the Secretary of the Smithsonian Institution, 1910-11. 819 pp. 1918. Report of the Ethnologist-in-charge [F. W. Hodge]. Pp. 7-34. Seneca fiction, legends, and myths. Collected by Jeremiah Curtin and J. N. B. Hewitt; edited by J. N. B. Hewitt. Pp. 37-813. Index. Pp. 815-819. 10 BUREAU OF AMERICAN ETHNOLOGY Thirty-third annual report of the Bureau of American Ethnology to the Secretary of the Smithsonian Institution, 1911-12. 677 pp., 95 pls., 112 figs. 1919. Report of the Ethnologist-in-charge [F. W. Hodge]. Pp. 7-38. Note on the accompanying papers. Pp. 39-40. Uses of plants by the Indians of the Missouri River region, by Melvin Randolph Gilmore. Pp. 43-154, pls. 1-30a. Available in separate form. Preliminary account of the antiquities of the region between the Mancos and La Plata Rivers in southwestern Colorado, by Earl H. Morris. Pp. 155-206, pls. 31-75, figs. 1-11. Available in separate form. Designs on prehistoric Hopi pottery, by Jesse Walter Fewkes. Pp. 207-284, pls. 76-90, figs. 12-112. The Hawaiian romance of Laieikawai, by Martha Warren Beckwith. Pp. 285- 666, pls. 91-95. Index. Pp. 667-677. Thirty-fourth annual report of the Bureau of American Ethnology to the Secretary of the Smithsonian Institution, 1912-13. 281 pp., 120 pls., 69 figs. 1922. Out of print. Report of the Ethnologist-in-charge [F. W. Hodge]. Pp. 5-32. A prehistoric island culture area of America, by J. Walter Fewkes. Pp. 35-271, pls. 1-120, figs. 1-69. Index. Pp. 273-281. Thirty-fifth annual report of the Bureau of American Ethnology to the Secretary of the Smithsonian Institution, 1913-14. Two parts, x1+794; viliI+795-1481 pp. 1921. Part 1: Report of the Ethnologist-in-charge [F. W. Hodge]. Pp. 7-37. Note on the accompanying paper. Pp. 39-40. Ethnology of the Kwakiutl, by Franz Boas (based on data collected by George Hunt). Pp. 43-794. Index. Pp. 1-x1. Part 2: Ethnology of the Kwakiutl [continued], by Franz Boas (based on data collected by George Hunt). Pp. v-vu1-+795-1473. Index. Pp. 1475-1481. Thirty-sixth annual report of the Bureau of American Ethnology to the Secretary of the Smithsonian Institution, 1914-15. 604 pp., 23 pls., 15 figs. 1921. Out of print. Report of the Ethnologist-in-charge [F. W. Hodge]. Pp. 7-34. The Osage tribe: Rite of the chiefs; sayings of the ancient men, by Francis La Flesche. Pp. 37-597, pls. 1-23, figs. 1-15. Index. Pp. 599-604. Thirty-seventh annual report of the Bureau of American Ethnology to the Secretary of the Smithsonian Institution, 1915-16. v11+560 pp., 58 pls., 38 figs. 1923. Out of print. LIST OF PUBLICATIONS 11 Report of the Ethnologist-in-charge [F. W. Hodge]. Pp. 1-31. The Winnebago tribe, by Paul Radin. Pp. 35-550, pls. 1-58, figs. 1-38. Index. Pp. 551-560, Thirty-eighth annual report of the Bureau of American Ethnology to the Secretary of the Smithsonian Institution, 1916-17. vm-+745 pp., 183 pls., 341 figs. 1924. Out of print. Report of the Ethnologist-in-charge [F. W. Hodge]. Pp. 1-21. An introductory study of the arts, crafts, and customs of the Guiana Indians, by Walter Edmund Roth. Pp. 25-720, pls. 1-183, figs. 1-341. Index and glossary. Pp. 721-745. Thirty-ninth annual report of the Bureau of American Ethnology to the Secretary of the Smithsonian Institution, 1917-18. 636 pp., 17 pls., 4 figs. 1925. Out of print. Report of the Chief [J. W. Fewkes]. Pp. 7-28. The Osage tribe: The rite of vigil, by Francis La Flesche. Pp. 31-630, pls. 1-17, figs. 1-4. Index. Pp. 631-636. Fortieth annual report of the Bureau of Americzn Ethnology to the Secretary of the Smithsonian Institution, 1918-19. vim-+664 pp., 2 pls., 2 figs. 1925. Out of print. Report of the Chief [J. W. Fewkes]. Pp. 1-20. The mythical origin of the White Buffalo Dance of the Fox Indians, by Truman Michelson. Pp. 23-289, pl. 1, fig. 1. The autobiography of a Fox Indian woman, by Truman Michelson. Pp. 291-349. Notes on Fox mortuary customs and beliefs, by Truman Michelson. Pp. 351-496. Notes on the Fox society known as “Those who worship the Little Spotted Buffalo,” by Truman Michelson. Pp. 497-539, pl. 2, fig. 2. The traditional origin of the Fox society known as “The singing around rite,” by Truman Michelson. Pp. 541-658. Index. Pp. 659-664. Forty-first annual repert of the Bureau of American Ethnology to the Secretary of the Smithsonian Institution, 1919-24. 31x-+626 pp., 137 pls., 201 figs., frontispiece, map in pocket. 1928. Out of print. Reports of the Chief [J. W. Fewkes] for 1919-20, 1920-21, 1921-22, 1922-23, 1923-24. Pp. 1-116. Coiled basketry in British Columbia and surrounding region, by H. K. Haeberlin, James A. Teit, and Helen H. Roberts, under the direction of Franz Boas. Pp. 119-484, frontispiece, map, pls. 1-94, figs. 1-122a. Two prehistoric villages in Middle Tennessee, by William Edward Myer. Pp. 485-614, pls. 95-137, figs. 123-200. Index. Pp. 615-626. Forty-second annual report of the Bureau of American Ethnology to the Secretary of the Smithsonian Institution, 1924-25. vm+900 pp., 17 pls., 108 figs. 1928. Oué of print. Report of the Chief [J. W. Fewkes]. Pp. 1-19. 12 BUREAU OF AMERICAN ETHNOLOGY Social organization and social usages of the Indians of the Creek Confederacy, by John R. Swanton. Pp. 23-472, pls. 1-7, figs. 1-107. Religious beliefs and medical practices of the Creek Indians, by John R. Swanton. Pp. 473-672, pls. 8-13, fig. 108. Aboriginal culture of the Southeast, by John R. Swanton. Pp. 673-726. Indian trails of the Southeast, by Wiliam E. Myer. Pp. 727-857, pls. 14-17. Index. Pp. 859-900. Forty-third annual report of the Bureau of American Ethnology to the Secretary of the Smithsonian Institution, 1925-26. viu-+828 pp., 44 pls., 9 figs. 1928. Out of print. Report of the Chief [J. W. Fewkes]. Pp. 1-19. The Osage tribe: Two versions of the child-naming rite, by Francis La Flesche. Pp. 23-164, pls. 1-12, figs. 1-8. Available in separate form. Wawenock myth texts from Maine, by Frank G. Speck. Pp. 165-197, pl. 13. Available in separate form. Native tribes and dialects of Connecticut: A Mohegan-Pequot diary, by Frank G. Speck. Pp. 199-287, pls. 14-42. Available in separate form. Picuris children’s stories, with texts and songs, by J. P. Harrington and Helen H. Roberts. Pp. 289-447, pls. 43-44, fig. 9. Iroquoian cosmology. Second part, with introduction and notes, by JscNenB: Hewitt. Pp. 449-819. Available in separate form. Index. Pp. 821-828. Forty-fourth annual report of the Bureau of American Ethnology to the Secretary of the Smithsonian Institution, 1926-27. v11+555 pp., 98 pls., 16 figs. 1928. Out of print. Report of the Chief [J. W. Fewkes]. Pp. 1-19. Exploration of the Burton Mound at Santa Barbara, California, by John P. Harrington. Pp. 23-168, pls. 1-27, figs. 1-2. Available in separate form. Social and religious beliefs and usages of the Chickasaw Indians, by John R. Swanton. Pp. 169-273, fig. 3. Avazlable in separate form. Uses of plants by the Chippewa Indians, by Frances Densmore. Pp. 275-397, pls. 28-63. Archeological investigations—II, by Gerard Fowke. Pp. 399-540, pls. 64-98, figs. 4-16. Available in separate form. Index. Pp. 541-555. Forty-fifth annual report of the Bureau of American Ethnology to the Secretary of the Smithsonian Institution, 1927-28. v11+-857 pp., 29 pls., 49 figs. 1930. Out of print. Report of the Chief Clerk [H. W. Dorsey]. Pp. 1-19. The Salishan tribes of the western plateaus, by James A. Teit, edited by Franz Boas. Pp. 23-396, pls. 1-4, figs. 1-39. Avazlable in separate form. Tattooing and face and body painting of the Thompson Indians, British Columbia, by James A. Teit, edited by Franz Boas. Pp. 397-439, pls. 5-18, figs. 40-47. Available in separate form. Ethnobotany of the Thompson Indians of British Columbia, based on field notes by James A. Teit, edited by Elsie Viault Steedman. Pp. 441-522. Available in separate form. LIST OF PUBLICATIONS 13 The Osage tribe: Rite of the Wa-xo’-be, by Francis La Flesche. Pp. 523-833, pls. 14-29, figs. 46-47 [figure numbers duplicated]. Avazlable in separate form. Index. Pp. 835-857. Forty-sixth annual report of the Bureau of American Ethnology to the Secretary of the Smithsonian Institution, 1928-29. vir+654 pp., 80 pls., 35 figs. 19380. Oud of print. Report of the Chief [M. W. Stirling]. Pp. 1-16. Anthropological survey in Alaska, by AleS Hrdli¢ka. Pp, 19-374, pls. 1-61, figs. 1-29. Indian tribes of the Upper Missouri, by Edwin Thompson Denig, edited with notes and biographical sketch by J. N. B. Hewitt. Pp. 375-628, pls. 62-80, figs. 30-35. Available in separate form. Index. Pp. 629-654. Forty-seventh annual report of the Bureau of American Ethnology to the Secretary of the Smithsonian Institution, 1929-30, vi1+1108 pp., 61 pls., 32 figs., 1 map. 1932. Out of print. Report of the Chief [M. W. Stirling]. Pp. 1-14. The Acoma Indians, by Leslie A. White. Pp. 17-192, pls. 1-16, figs. 1-6. Isleta, New Mexico, by Elsie Clews Parsons. Pp. 193-466, pls. 17-20, figs. 1-26, map. Introduction to Zufii ceremonialism, by Ruth L. Bunzel. Pp. 467-544. Zuni origin myths, by Ruth L. Bunzel. Pp. 545-609. Zuni ritual poetry, by Ruth L. Bunzel. Pp. 611-835. Zui katcinas: An analytical study, by Ruth L. Bunzel. Pp. 837-1086, pls. 21-61. Index. Pp. 1087-1108. (All papers available in separate form.) Forty-eighth annual report of the Bureau of American Ethnology to the Secretary of the Smithsonian Institution, 1930-31. v+1221 pp. 1933. Report of the Chief [M. W. Stirling]. Pp. 1-21. General Index, Annual Reports of the Bureau of American Ethnology, Vols. 1 to 48 (1879-1931) [Washington, D. C., 1881-1933], compiled by Biren Bon- nerjea. Pp. 25-1221. Nore.—The Forty-eighth Annual Report of the Bureau is the last of this series published in royal octavo size with accompanying scientific papers. Sub- sequent annual reports of the Bureau will consist only of the administrative report, which will be issued in octavo form. Forty-ninth annual report of the Bureau of American Ethnology [M. W. Stirling, Chief] to the Secretary of the Smithsonian Institution, 1931 32. vI+8 pp. 1933. Out of print. Fiftieth annual report of the Bureau of American Ethnology [M. W. Stirling, Chief] to the Secretary of the Smithsonian Institution, 1932- 33. 7 pp. 1933. Out of print. 14 BUREAU OF AMERICAN ETHNOLOGY Fifty-first annual report of the Bureau of American Ethnology [M. W. Stirling, Chief] to the Secretary of the Smithsonian Institution, 1933- 34. S8pp. 1935. Out of print. Fifty-second annual report of the Bureau of American Ethnology [M. W. Stirling, Chief] to the Secretary of the Smithsonian Institution, 1934— 35. Spp. 1935. Out of print. Fifty-third annual report of the Bureau of American Ethnology [M. W. Stirling, Chief] to the Secretary of the Smithsonian Institution, 1935- 36. 8pp. 1937. Out of print. Fifty-fourth annual report of the Bureau of American Ethnology [M. W. Stirling, Chief] to the Secretary of the Smithsonian Institution, 1936- 37. Opp. 1938. Out of print. Fifty-fifth annual report of the Bureau of American Ethnology [M. W. Stirling, Chief] to the Secretary of the Smithsonian Institution, 1937— 38. 8 pp. 1939. Fifty-sixth annual report of the Bureau of American Ethnology [M. W. Stirling, Chief] to the Secretary of the Smithsonian Institution, 1938- 39. Opp. 1940. Fifty-seventh annual report of the Bureau of American Ethnology [M. W. Stirling, Chief] to the Secretary of the Smithsonian Institution, 1939- 40. 10 pp. 1941. Fifty-eighth annual report of the Bureau of American Ethnology [M. W. Stirling, Chief] to the Secretary of the Smithsonian Institution, 1940— 41. 13 pp. 1942. Fifty-ninth annual report of the Bureau of American Ethnology [M. W. Stirling, Chief] to the Secretary of the Smithsonian Institution, 1941— 42. 12 pp. 1948. Sixtieth annual report of the Bureau of American Ethnology |M. W. Stirling, Chief] to the Secretary of the Smithsonian Institution, 1942- 43. Qpp. 1944. Sixty-first annual report of the Bureau of American Ethnology [M. W. Stirling, Chief] to the Secretary of the Smithsonian Institution, 1943- 44. 8pp. 1946. Sixty-second annual report of the Bureau of American Ethnology [M. W. Stirling, Chief] to the Secretary of the Smithsonian Institution, 1944— 45. Opp. 1946. LIST OF PUBLICATIONS 15 Sixty-third annual report of the Bureau of American Ethnology [M. W. Stirling, Chief] to the Secretary of the Smithsonian Institution, 1945- 46. 12pp. 1947. Sixty-fourth annual report of the Bureau of American Ethnology [M. W. Stirling, Director] to the Secretary of the Smithsonian Institution, 1946-47. 30 pp. 1948. Out of print. Sixty-fifth annual report of the Bureau of American Ethnology [M. W. Stirling, Director] to the Secretary of the Smithsonian Institution, 1947-48. 32 pp. 1949. Sixty-sixth annual report of the Bureau of American Ethnology [M. W. Stirling, Director] to the Secretary of the Smithsonian Institution, 1948-49. 34 pp. 1950. Sixty-seventh annual report of the Bureau of American Ethnology [M. W. Stirling, Director] to the Secretary of the Smithsonian Institution, 1949-50. 25 pp. 1951. Sixty-eighth annual report of the Bureau of American Ethnology [M. W. Stirling, Director] to the Secretary of the Smithsonian Institution, 1950-51. 40 pp. 1952. Sixty-ninth annual report of the Bureau of American Ethnology [M. W. Stirling, Director] to the Secretary of the Smithsonian Institution, 1951-52. 30 pp. 1953. Seventieth annual report of the Bureau of American Ethnology [M. W. Stirling, Director] to the Secretary of the Smithsonian Institution, 1952-53. 33 pp. 1954. Seventy-first annual report of the Bureau of American Ethnology [M. W. Stirling, Director] to the Secretary of the Smithsonian Institution, 1953-54. 17 pp. 1955. Seventy-second annual report of the Bureau of American Ethnology [M. W. Stirling, Director] to the Secretary of the Smithsonian Insti- tution, 1954-55. 24 pp. 1956. BULLETINS (In octavo form) 1. Bibliography of the Eskimo language, by James Constantine Pilling. v+116 pp. (incl. 8 pp. facsimiles). 1887. Out of print. 2. Perforated stones from California, by Henry W. Henshaw. 34 pp., 16 figs. 1887. Out of print. 3. The use of gold and other metals among the ancient inhabitants of Chiriqui, Isthmus of Darien, by William H. Holmes. 27 pp., 22 figs. 1887. Out of print. 16 12. 13. 14. 15. 16. Mle 18. 19. 20. 21. BUREAU OF AMERICAN ETHNOLOGY . Work in mound exploration of the Bureau of Ethnology, by Cyrus Thomas. 15 pp., 1 fig. 1887. Out of print. . Bibliography of the Siouan languages, by James Constantine Pilling. v+87 pp. 1887. Out of print. . Bibliography of the Iroquoian languages, by James Constantine Pilling. vi-+208 pp. (incl. 4 pp. facsimiles), 5 unnumbered fac- similes. 1888 [1889]. Out of print. . Textile fabrics of ancient Peru, by William H. Holmes. 17 pp., 11 figs. 1889. Out of print. . The problem of the Ohio mounds, by Cyrus Thomas. 54 pp., 8 figs. 1889. Out of print. . Bibliography of the Muskhogean languages, by James Constantine Pilling. v+114 pp. 1889. Out of print. . The circular, square, and octagonal earthworks of Ohio, by Cyrus. Thomas. 35 pp., 11 pls., 5 figs. 1889. Out of print. Omaha and Ponka letters, by James Owen Dorsey. 127 pp. 1891. Out of print. Catalogue of prehistoric works east of the Rocky Mountains, by Cyrus Thomas. 246 pp., 17 pls. (all maps). 1891. Out of print. Bibliography of the Algonquian languages, by James Constantine Pilling. x+614 pp., 82 facsimiles. [Bibliographic notes on Eliot’s Indian Bible and other works, pp. 127-184, 21 pls.] 1891 [1892]. Out of print. [In separate form:] Bibliographic notes on Elict’s Indian Bible and on his other translations and works in the Indian language of Massachusetts. 4°. 60 pp., 21 pls. (facsimiles). 1890. Out of print. Bibliography of the Athapascan languages, by James Constantine Pilling. x11-+125 pp. (inel. 4 pp. facsimiles). 1892. Out of print. Bibliography of the Chinookan languages (including the Chinook jargon), by James Constantine Pilling. x1m+81 pp. (incl. 3 facsimiles). 18938. Out of print. Bibliography of the Salishan languages, by James Constantine Pilling. x11-+86 pp. (incl. 4 pp. facsimiles). 1893. Oud of print. The Pamunkey Indians of Virginia, by Jno. Garland Pollard. Preface by W J McGee. 19 pp. 1894. Out of print. The Maya year, by Cyrus Thomas. Prefatory note by W J McGee. 64 pp., 1 pl. 1894. Oud of print. Bibliography of the Wakashan languages, by James Constantine Pilling. x1+70 pp. (incl. 2 pp. facsimiles). 1894. Out of print. Chinook texts, by Franz Boas. 278 pp., 1 pl. 1894 [1895]. Out of print. An ancient quarry in Indian Territory, by William Henry Holmes. 19 pp., 12 pls., 7 figs. 1894. Out of print. 22. 23. 26. . Tsimshian texts, by Franz Boas. 244 pp. 1902. 28. 29. 30. 31. 32. 33. 34. 35. 36. 37. LIST OF PUBLICATIONS ve The Siouan tribes of the East, by James Mooney. 101 pp., map. 1894 [1895]. Out of print. Archeologic investigations in James and Potomac Valleys, by Gerard Fowke. 80 pp., 17 figs. 1894 [1895]. Out of print. . List of the publications of the Bureau of Ethnology, with index to. authors and subjects, by Frederick Webb Hodge. 25 pp. 1894. Out of print. . Natick dictionary, by James Hammond Trumbull. [With intro- duction by Edward Everett Hale, pp. rx—xm.] xxvur+349 pp. 1903. Kathlamet texts, by Franz Boas. 261 pp., 1 pl. 1901. Mexican and Central American antiquities, calendar systems, and history: Twenty-four papers by Eduard Seler, E. Férstemann, Paul Schellhas, Carl Sapper, and E. P. Dieseldorff. Translated from the German under the supervision of Charles P. Bowditch. 682 pp., 49 pls., 1384 figs. 1904. Oud of print. Haida texts and myths: Skidegate dialect, by John R. Swanton. 448 pp., 5 figs. 1905. Out of print. Handbook of American Indians north of Mexico, edited by Fred- erick Webb Hodge. Pt. 1, 1x+972 pp., many figures, map. Pt. 2, Iv+-1221 pp., many figures. Pt. 1, 1907. Pt. 2, 1910. 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 distribution by the Bureau. Out of print. List of publications of the Bureau of American Hthnology, with index to authors and titles. 31 pp. 1906. Out of print. Antiquities of the Jemez Plateau, New Mexico, by Edgar L. Hewett. 55 pp., 17 pls. (incl. 1 map), 31 figs. 1906. Out of print. Skeletal remains suggesting or attributed to early man in North America, by Ales Hrdli¢éka. [Prefatory note by W. H. Holmes. | 113 pp., 21 pls., 16 figs. 1907. Out of print. Physiological and medical observations among the Indians of southwestern United States and northern Mexico, by Ales Hrdli¢ka. 1x+460 pp., 28 pls., 2 figs. 1908. Out of print. Antiquities of the upper Gila and Salt River valleys in Arizona and New Mexico, by Walter Hough. 96 pp., 11 pls. (incl. 1 map), 51 figs. 1907. Out of print. List of publications of the Bureau of American Ethnology, with index to authors and titles. 31 pp. 1907. Oud of print. 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). [Wzth Report on skeletal 18 BUREAU OF AMERICAN ETHNOLOGY material from Missouri Mounds, collected in 1906-07 by Mr. Gerard Fowke, by Ales Hrdlitka, pp. 103-112.] viu+116 pp., 19 pls., 20 figs. 1910. Out of print. 38. Unwritten literature of Hawaii. The sacred songs of the hula collected and translated, with notes, and an account of the hula, by Nathaniel B. Emerson, A. M., M. D. [Prefatory note by W. H. Holmes.] 288 pp., 24 pls., 3 figs., 14 musical pieces. 1909. Out of print. 39. Tlingit myths and texts, recorded by John R. Swanton, viu-+451 pp. 1909. Out of print. 40. Handbook of American Indian languages, by Franz Boas. Pt. 1, vui+1069 pp. Pt. 2,v+903 pp. Pt.1,1911. [Reprinted 1917. ] Pt. 2, 1922. (Pt. 3, ed. by Franz Boas. Published by J. J. Augustin, New York: separates, 1933-38; volume, 1938.) Out of print. Part 1: Introduction, by Franz Boas; Athapascan (Hupa), by Pliny Earle Goddard; Tlingit, Haida, by John R. Swanton; Tsimshian, Kwakiutl, Chinook, by Franz Boas; Maidu, by Roland B. Dixon; Algonquian (Fox), by William Jones (revised by Truman Michelson); Siouan (Dakota), by Franz Boas and John R. Swanton; Eskimo, by William Thalbitzer. Part 2: Takelma, by Edward Sapir; Coos, by Leo J. Frachtenberg; Sius- lawan, by Leo J. Frachtenberg; Chukchee, by Waldemar Bogoras. 41. Antiquities of the Mesa Verde National Park: Spruce-tree House, by J. Walter Fewkes. v111+57 pp., 21 pls., 37 figs. 1909. Out of print. 42. Tuberculosis among certain Indian tribes of the United States, by AleS Hrdli¢éka. vi1+48 pp., 22 pls. 1909. Out of print. 43. Indian tribes of the lower Mississippi Valley and adjacent coast of the Gulf of Mexico, by John R. Swanton. v1u-+387 pp., 32 pls. (incl. 1 map), 2 figs. 1911. Out of print. 44, Indian languages of Mexico and Central America, and their geo- graphical distribution, by Cyrus Thomas, assisted by John R. Swanton. Accompanied with a linguistic map. [Prefatory note by W. H. Holmes.] vu+108 pp., 1 map. 1911. Out of print. 45. Chippewa music, by Frances Densmore. x1x+216 pp., 12 pls., 8 figs., 200 songs. 1910. Out of print. 46. A dictionary of the Choctaw language, by Cyrus Byington, edited by John R. Swanton and Henry 8. Halbert. x1+611 pp., 1 pl. 1915. (Reprinted 1918.) Out of print. 47. A dictionary of the Biloxi and Ofo languages, accompanied with thirty-one Biloxi tests and numerous Biloxi phrases, by James Owen Dorsey and John R. Swanton. v+340 pp. 1912. (Re- printed 1916.) Out of print. LIST OF PUBLICATIONS 19 48. The Choctaw of Bayou Lacomb, St. Tammany Parish, Louisiana, by David I. Bushnell, Jr. 1x+37 pp., 22 pls., 1 fig. 1909. (Re- printed 1917.) Out of print. 49. List of publications of the Bureau of American Ethnology, with index to authors and titles. 32pp. 1910. Outof print. (Second impression 1911, 34 pp. Out of print.) 50. Preliminary report on a visit to the Navaho National Monument, Arizona, by Jesse Walter Fewkes. vu+35 pp., 22 pls., 3 figs. 1911. Out of print. 51. Antiquities of the Mesa Verde National Park: Cliff Palace, by Jesse Walter Fewkes. 82 pp., 35 pls., 4 figs. 1911. Out of print. 52. Early man in South America, by AleS Hrdliéka in collaboration with William H. Holmes, Bailey Willis, Fred. Eugene Wright, and Clarence N. Fenner. xv+405 pp., 68 pls., 51 figs. 1912. Out of print. 53. Chippewa music—II, by Frances Densmore. xx1+341 pp., 45. pls., 6 figs., 180 songs. 1913. Out of print. 54. The physiography of the Rio Grande Valley, New Mexico, in relation to Pueblo culture, by Edgar Lee Hewett, Junius Hender- son, and Wilfred William Robbins. 76 pp., 11 pls., 2 figs. 1913. Out of print. The Rio Grande Valley, New Mexico, by Edgar Lee Hewett. Pp. 11-22. Geology and topography of the Rio region in New Mexico, by Junius Henderson. Pp. 23-39. Climate and evidence of climatic changes, by Junius Henderson and Wilfred William Robbins. Pp. 41-76. 55. Ethnobotany of the Tewa Indians, by Wilfred William Robbins, John Peabody Harrington, and Barbara Freire-Marreco. xim-+ 124 pp., 9 pls., 7 figs. 1916. Out of print. Ethnozoology of the Tewa Indians, by Junius Henderson and John: Peabody Harrington. x+76 pp. 1914. 57. An introduction to the study of the Maya hieroglyphs, by Sylvanus Griswold Morley. xv1+284 pp., 32 pls., 85 figs. 1915. Out of print. 58. List of publications of the Bureau of American Ethnology, with index to authors and titles. 39 pp. 1914. Out of print. 59. Kutenai tales, by Franz Boas; together with texts collected by Alexander Francis Chamberlain. x11+387 pp. 1918. Out of print. 60. Handbook of aboriginal American antiquities. Part I. Introduc- tory: The lithic industries, by W. H. Holmes. xv1m+380 pp., 223 figs. 1919. Out of print. 61. Teton Sioux music, by Frances Densmore. xxvuI+561 pp., 82: pls., 43 figs., 240 songs. 1918. Out of print. 56. fr) 20 62. 63. 64. 65. 66. 67 e 68. 69. 70. 71. 72. 73. 74. 75. 76. LIC BUREAU OF AMERICAN ETHNOLOGY Physical anthropology of the Lenape or Delawares, and of the Eastern Indians in general, by Ale’ Hrdli¢ka. 130 pp., 29 pls., 1 fig. 1916. Out of print. Analytical and critical bibliography of the tribes of Tierra del Fuego and adjacent territory, by John M. Cooper. 1x+233 pp., 1 pl. (map). 1917. Out of print. The Maya Indians of southern Yucatan and northern British Hon- duras, by Thomas W. F. Gann. 146 pp., 28 pls., 84 figs. 1918. Out of print. Archeological explorations in northeastern Arizona, by Alfred Vin- cent Kidder and Samuel J. Guernsey. 228 pp., 97 pls., 102 figs. 1919. Out of print. Recent discoveries attributed to early man in America, by Ales Hrdlitka. 67 pp., 14 pls., 8 figs. 1918. Out of print. Alsea text and myths, by Leo J. Frachtenberg. 304 pp. 1920. Out of print. A structural and lexical comparison of the Tunica, Chitimacha, and Atakapa languages, by John R. Swanton. 56 pp. 1919. Out of print. Native villages and village sites east of the Mississippi, by David I. Bushnell, Jr. 111 pp., 17 pls., 12 figs. 1919. Out of print. Prehistoric villages, castles, and towers of southwestern Colorado, by J. Walter Fewkes. 79 pp., 33 pls., 18 figs. 1919. Out of print. Native cemeteries and forms of burial east of the Mississippi, by David I. Bushnell, Jr. 160 pp., 17 pls., 17 figs. 1920. Out of print. The owl sacred pack of the Fox Indians, by Truman Michelson. 83 pp., 4 pls. 1921. Out of print. Early history of the Creek Indians and their neighbors, by John R. Swanton. 492 pp., 10 pls. (all pocket maps). 1922. Out of print. Excavation of a site at Santiago Ahuitzotla, D. F. Mexico, by Alfred M. Tozzer. 56 pp., 19 pls., 9 figs. 1921. Out of print. Northern Ute music, by Frances Densmore. 213 pp., 16 pls., 21 figs., 110 songs. 1922. Out of print. Archeological investigations. I. Cave explorations in the Ozark region of Central Missouri. II. Cave explorations in other States. III. Explorations along the Missouri River blufis in Kansas and Nebraska. IV. Aboriginal house mounds. V. Archeological work in Hawaii. By Gerard Fowke. 204 pp., 45 pls., 37 figs. 1922. Out of print. Villages of the Algonquian, Siouan, and Caddoan tribes west of the Mississippi, by David I. Bushnell, Jr. x-+211 pp., 55 pls., 12 figs. 1922. Out of print. 78. 79. 80. 81. 82. 83. 84. 85 86. 87. 88. 89. 90. 91. 92 93. 94. LIST OF PUBLICATIONS 9 Al Handbook of the Indians of California, by A. L. Kroeber. xvmiI-+ 995 pp., 83 pls. (incl. 1 pocket map), 78 figs. 1925. Out of print. Blood revenge, war, and victory feasts among the Jibaro Indians of Eastern Ecuador, by Rafael Karsten. vi1+94 pp., 10 pls. 1923. Out of print. Mandan and Hidatsa music, by Frances Densmore. xx+192 pp., 19 pls., 6 figs., 110 songs. 1923. Out of print. Excavations in the Chama Valley, New Mexico, by J. A. Jeancon. 1x+80 pp., 65 pls., 38 figs. 1923. Out of print. Archeological observations north of the Rio Colorado, by Neil M. Judd. 1x+171 pp., 61 pls., 46 figs. 1926. Out of print. Burials of the Algonquian, Siouan, and Caddoan tribes west of the Mississippi, by David I. Bushnell, Jr. x-+103 pp., 37 pls., 3 figs. 1927. Out of print. Vocabulary of the Kiowa Language, by John P. Harrington. v+ 255 pp., 1 fig. 1928. Contributions to Fox Ethnology: Notes on the ceremonial runners of the Fox Indians; a Sauk and Fox sacred pack; a sacred pack called A‘penéawaénaé‘a belonging to the Thunder gens of the Fox Indians; a sacred pack called Sagima‘kwawa belonging to the Bear gens of the Fox Indians. By Truman Michelson. vum-+168 pp., 2 pls., 2 figs. 1927. Out of print. Chippewa customs, by Frances Densmore. x11+204 pp., 90 pls., 27 figs. 1929. Out of print. Notes on the Buffalo-head dance of the Thunder gens of the Fox Indians, by Truman Michelson. v+94 pp., 1 fig. 1928. Myths and tales of the Southeastern Indians, by John R. Swanton. X+275 pp. 1929. Oud of print. Observations on the Thunder dance of the Bear gens of the Fox Indians, by Truman Michelson. v+73 pp., 1 fig. 1929. Papago music, by Frances Densmore. xx-+229 pp., 19 pls., 4 figs., 167 songs. 1929. Additional studies of the arts, crafts, and customs of the Guiana Indians, with special reference to those of southern British Guiana, by Walter E. Roth. xv1r+110 pp., 34 pls., 90 figs. 1929. Out of print. Shabik’eshchee village: A late Basket Maker site in the Chaco Canyon, New Mexico, by Frank H. H. Roberts, Jr. vir1+164 pp., 31 pls., 32 figs. 1929. Out of print. Pawnee music, by Frances Densmore. xv11I+129 pp., 8 pls., 86 songs. 1929. Tobacco among the Karuk Indians of California, by John P. Har- rington. xxxvI+284 pp., 36 pls., 2 figs. 1932. 22 95. 96. 97. 98. 99. 100. 101. 102. 103. 104. 105 106. 107. 108. 109. 110. 111. 112. BUREAU OF AMERICAN ETHNOLOGY Contributions to Fox ethnology—II, by Truman Michelson. vit-+ 183 pp., 1 fig. 1930. Out of print. Early Pueblo ruins in the Piedra district, southwestern Colorado, by Frank H. H. Roberts, Jr. 1x+190 pp., 55 pls., 40 figs. 1980. Out of print. The Kamia of Imperial Valley, by E. W. Gifford. vi-+94 pp., 2 pls., 4 figs. 1931. Out of print. Tales of the Cochiti Indians, by Ruth Benedict. x+256 pp. 1931. Out of print. The Swimmer manuscript: Cherokee sacred formulas and medicinal prescriptions, by James Mooney; revised, completed, and edited by Frans M. Olbrechts. xvit+319 pp., 13 pls. 1932. Out of print. The ruins at Kiatuthlanna, eastern Arizona, by Frank H. H. Roberts, Jr. vitt+195 pp., 47 pls., 31 figs. 1931. Out of print. War ceremony and peace ceremony of the Osage Indians, by Francis La Flesche. vir+280 pp., 13 pls., 1 fig. 1939. Out of print. Menominee music, by Frances Densmore. xx1I-+230 pp., 27 pls., 3 figs., 140 songs. 1932. Out of print. Source material for the social and ceremonial life of the Choctaw Indians, by John R. Swanton. vu+282 pp., 6 pls., 1 fig. 1931. Out of print. A survey of prehistoric sites in the region of Flagstaff, Arizona, by Harold 8. Colton. vi1+69 pp., 10 pls. (incl. 4 maps), 21 figs. 1932. Out of print. Notes on the Fox Wapaniwiweni, by Truman Michelson. v+195 pp., 1 fig. 1932. Ethnographical survey of the Miskito and Sumu Indians of Hon- duras and Nicaragua, by Eduard Conzemius. v1i+191 pp., 10 pls., 1 fig. 1932. Out of print. Karuk Indian myths, by John P. Harrington. v+34 pp. 1932. Out of print. A dictionary of the Atakapa language, accompanied by text material, by Albert S. Gatschet and John R. Swanton. v+181 pp., 1 pl. 1932. A dictionary of the Osage language, by Francis La Flesche. v+406 pp. 1932. Out of print. Yuman and Yaqui music, by Frances Densmore. xvilI+216 pp., 31 pls., 7 figs., 130 songs. 1932. Out of print. The village of the Great Kivas on the Zufi Reservation, New Mexico, by Frank H. H. Roberts, Jr. 1x+197 pp., 64 pls., 34 figs. 1932. Out of print. An introduction to Pawnee archeology, by Waldo Rudolph Wedel. x1+122 pp., 12 pls., 10 maps, 12 figs. 1936. Out of print. LIST OF PUBLICATIONS 23 113. The Troyville mounds, Catahoula Parish, La., by Winslow M. Walker. vut+73 pp., 16 pls., 15 figs. 1936. Out of print. 114. Fox miscellany, by Truman Michelson. v+124 pp., 9 figs. 1937. 115. Journal of Rudolph Friederich Kurz. Translated by Myrtis Jarrell. Edited by J. N. B. Hewitt. 1x+382 pp., 48 pls. 1947. Out of print. 116. Ancient caves of the Great Salt Lake region, by Julian H. Steward. xIv+131 pp., 9 pls., 1 map, 48 figs. 1937. Out of print. 117. Historical and ethnographical material on the Jivaro Indians, by M. W. Stirling. x1+148 pp., 37 pls., 1 map, 6 figs. 1938. Out of print. 118. An archaeological survey of the Norris Basin in eastern Tennessee, by William S. Webb. xv+398 pp., 152 pls., 2 maps, 79 figs. 1938. Out of print. 119. Anthropological papers [numbers 1-6]. 1x+204 pp., 12 pls., 7 figs. 1938. Out of print. No. 1. A preliminary report on archeological explorations at Macon, Ga., by A. R. Kelly. Pp. v-1x+1-68, pls. 1-12, figs. 1-7. No. 2. The northern Arapaho flat pipe and the ceremony of covering the pipe, by John G. Carter. Pp. 69-102, figs. 8-10. No. 3. The Caribs of Dominica, by Douglas Taylor. Pp. 103-159, pls. 13-18, figs. 11-37. No. 4. What happened to Green Bear who was blessed with a sacred pack, by Truman Michelson. Pp. 161-176. No. 5. Lemhi Shoshoni physical therapy, by Julian H. Steward. Pp. 177-181. No. 6. Panatiibiji’, an Owens Valley Paiute, by Julian H. Steward. Pp. 183-195. Papers available in separate form. Nore.— With this bulletin the Bureau of American Ethnology inaugurated a new series of Anthropological Papers, designed as an outlet for brief articles. These papers are numbered consecutively, a bulletin being devoted to them from time to time as they accumulate. A limited edition of Anthropological Papers is issued in separate form. 120. Basin-plateau aboriginal sociopolitical groups, by Julian H. Steward. x11+346 pp., 3 pls., 13 figs. 1938. Out of print. 121. Archeological remains in the Whitewater District, eastern Arizona. Part I. House types, by Frank H. H. Roberts, Jr. x11+276 pp., 30 pls., 53 figs. 1939. Out of print. 122. An archaeological survey of Wheeler Basin on the Tennessee River in northern Alabama, by William S. Webb. xv+214 pp., 122 pls., 2 maps, 25 figs. 1939. Out of print. 123. Anthropological papers [numbers 7-12]. v111+305 pp., 32 pls., 27 figs. 1939. Out of print. No. 7. Archeological investigations in the Corozal District of British Hon- duras, by Thomas and Mary Gann. [Incl. Report on two skulls from British Honduras, by A. J. E. Cave, pp. 59-60]. vii—virr+ 1-66, pls. 1-10, figs. 1-11. 24 124. 125. 126. 127. 128. 129. BUREAU OF AMERICAN ETHNOLOGY No. 8. Linguistic classification of Cree and Montagnais-Naskapi dialects; by Truman Michelson. Pp. 67-95, fig. 12. No. 9. Sedelmayr’s Relacion of 1746, translated and edited by Ronald L. Ives. Pp. 97-117. No. 10. Notes on the Creek Indians, by J. N. B. Hewitt, edited by John R. Swanton. Pp. 119-159, figs. 13-14. No. 11. The Yaruros of the Capanaparo River, Venezuela, by Vincenzo Petrullo. Pp. 161-290, pls. 11-25, figs. 15-27. No. 12. Archeology of Arauquin, by Vincenzo Petrullo. Pp. 291-295, pls. 26-32. Papers available in separate form. Nootka and Quileute music, by Frances Densmore. xxv1+358 pp., 24 pls., 7 figs., 210 songs. 1939. Out of print. Ethnography of the Fox Indians, by William Jones, edited by Margaret Welpley Fisher. 1x+156 pp. 1939. Out of print. Archeological remains in the Whitewater District, eastern Arizona. Part II. Artifacts and burials, by Frank H. H. Roberts, Jr. With appendix, Skeletal remains from the Whitewater District, eastern Arizona, by T. D. Stewart. x1+170 pp., 57 pls., 44 figs. 1940. Out of print. Linguistic material from the tribes of southern Texas and north- eastern Mexico, by John R. Swanton. v+145 pp. 1940. Anthropological papers, numbers 13-18. x11+368 pp., 52 pls., 77 figs. 1941. Oud of print. No. 13. The mining of gems and ornamental stones by American Indians, by Sydney H. Ball. Pp. rx-xu+1-77, pls. 1-5. No. 14. Iroquois suicide: A study in the stability of a culture pattern, by William N. Fenton. Pp. 79-137, pls. 6-8. No. 15. Tonawanda longhouse ceremonies: Ninety years after Lewis Henry Morgan, by William N. Fenton. Pp. 139-165, pls. 9-18. No. 16. The Quichua-speaking Indians of the Province of Imbabura (Ecuador) and their anthropometric relations with the living populations of the Andean area, by John Gillin. Pp. 167-228, pls. 19-29, figs. 1-2. No. 17. Art processes in birchbark of the River Desert Algonquin, a circumboreal trait, by Frank G. Speck. Pp. 229-274, pls. 30-42, figs. 3-25. No. 18. Archeological reconnaissance of southern Utah, by Julian H. Steward. Pp. 275-356, pls. 43-52, figs. 26-77. Papers available in separate form. An archeological survey of Pickwick Basin in the adjacent portions of the States of Alabama, Mississippi, and Tennessee, by William S. Webb and David L. DeJarnette. With additions by Walter B. Jones; J. P. E. Morrison; Marshall T. Newman and Charles E. Snow; and William G. Haag. xxu+536 pp., 316 pls., 2 maps, 99 figs. 1942. Out of print. Geology of the Pickwick Basin, in adjacent parts of Tennessee, Mississippi, and Alabama, by Walter B. Jones. Pp. 327-335. LIST OF PUBLICATIONS 25 Preliminary report on mollusks found in the shell mounds of the Pickwick Landing Basin in the Tennessee River Valley by J. P. E. Morrison. Pp. 337-392. Preliminary report on the skeletal material from Pickwick Basin, Alabama, by Marshall T. Newman and Charles E. Snow. Pp. 393-507. A description and analysis of the Pickwick pottery, by William G. Haag. Pp. 509-526. 130. Archeological investigations at Buena Vista Lake, Kern County, California, by Waldo R. Wedel. With appendix, Skeletal remains from the Buena Vista sites, California, by T. D. Stewart. virt-+ 194 pp., 57 pls., 19 figs. 1941. Out of print. 131. Peachtree Mound and village site, Cherokee County, North Caro- lina, by Frank M. Setzler and Jesse D. Jennings. With appendix, Skeletal remains from the Peachtree Site, North Carolina, by T. D. Stewart. 1x+103 pp., 50 pls., 12 figs. 1941. Out of print. 132. Source material on the history and ethnology of the Caddo Indians, by John R. Swanton. vm+332 pp., 19 pls., 5 figs. 1942. Out of print. 133. Anthropological papers, numbers 19-26. 1x+615 pp., 34 pls., 62 figs. 1943 [1944]. Out of print. No. 19. A search for songs among the Chitimacha Indians in Louisiana, by Frances Densmore. Pp. 1-15, pls. 1-4. No. 20. Archeological survey on the northern Northwest Coast, by Philip Drucker. With appendix, Early vertebrate fauna of the British Columbia coast, by Edna M. Fisher. Pp. 17-142, pls. 5-9, figs. 1-33. No. 21. Some notes on a few sites in Beaufort County, South Carolina, by Regina Flannery. Pp. 143-153, figs. 34-35. No, 22. An analysis and interpretation of the ceramic remains from two sites near Beaufort, South Carolina, by James B. Griffin. Pp. 155-168, pls. 10-12. No. 23. The Eastern Cherokees, by William Harlen Gilbert, Jr. Pp. 169- 413, pls. 138-17, figs. 36-55. Out of print. No. 24. Aconite poison whaling in Asia and America: An Aleutian transfer to the New World, by Robert F. Heizer. Pp. 415-468, pls. 18-23a, figs. 56-60. No. 25. The Carrier Indians of the Bulkley River: Their social and religious life, by Diamond Jenness. Pp. 469-586, pls. 24-34, figs. 61-62. No. 26. The quipu and Peruvian civilization, by John R. Swanton. Pp. 587-596. Papers available in separate form. 134. The native tribes of eastern Bolivia and western Matto Grosso, by Alfred Métraux. 1x+182 pp., 5 pls., 1 fig. 1942. Out of print. 135. Origin myth of Acoma and other records, by Matthew W. Stirling. viti+123 pp., 17 pls., 8 figs. 1942. Out of print. 136. Anthropological papers, numbers 27-32. v11+375 pp., 32 pls., 5 figs. 1943 [1944]. Out of print. 26 BUREAU OF AMERICAN ETHNOLOGY No. 27. Music of the Indians of British Columbia, by Frances Densmore. Pp. 1-99, pls. 1-9, figs. 1-2, 98 songs. No. 28. Choctaw music, by Frances Densmore. Pp. 101-188, pls. 10-21, figs. 3-4, 65 songs. No. 29. Some ethnological data concerning one hundred Yucatan plants, by Morris Steggerda. Pp. 189-226, pls. 22-24. No. 30. A description of thirty towns in Yucatan, Mexico, by Morris Steggerda. Pp. 227-248, pls. 25-28. No. 31. Some western Shoshoni myths, by Julian H. Steward. Pp. 249- 299. No. 32. New material from Acoma, by Leslie A. White. Pp. 301-359, pls. 29-32, fig. 5. Papers available in separate form. 137. The Indians of the Southeastern United States, by John R. Swanton. x111+943 pp., 107 pls., 5 figs., 13 maps. 1946. Out of print. 138. Stone monuments of southern Mexico, by Matthew W. Stirling. v1I+84 pp., 62 pls., 14 figs. 1943 [1944]. 139. An introduction to the ceramics of Tres Zapotes, Veracruz, Mexico, by C. W. Weiant. x1v+144 pp., 78 pls., 54 figs., 10 maps. 1943. 140. Ceramic sequences at Tres Zapotes, Veracruz, Mexico, by Philip Drucker. 1x+155 pp., 65 pls., 46 figs. 1943. 141. Ceramic stratigraphy at Cerro de las Mesas, Veracruz, Mexico, by Philip Drucker. vi11+95 pp., 58 pls., 210 figs. 1943 [1944]. 142. The contemporary culture of the Chita Indians, by Ralph L. Beals. x11+244 pp., 20 pls., 33 figs., 1 map. 1945. 143. Handbook of South American Indians. Julian H. Steward, editor. 6 vols. (Vols. 1-2, 1946; 3-4, 1948; 5, 1949; 6, 1950). Index vol. in preparation. Volume 1. The Marginal tribes. x1x+624 pp., 112 pls., 69 figs., 7 maps. 1946. Out of print. Part 1. Indians of southern South America. Introduction, by Julian H. Steward. Pp. 1-9. The Southern Hunters, by John M. Cooper. Pp. 13-15, pls. 1-4. The archeology of Patagonia, by Junius Bird. Pp. 17-24, pls. 5-12. The archeology of the Greater Pampa, by Gordon R. Willey. Pp. 25-46, pls. 13-22, figs. 1-9. The Chono, by John M. Cooper. Pp. 47-54. The Alacaluf, by Junius Bird. Pp. 55-79, pls. 23-32, fig. 10. The Yahgan, by John M. Cooper. Pp. 81-106, figs. 11-14. The Ona, by John M. Cooper. Pp. 107-125, figs. 15-17. The Patagonian and Pampean Hunters, by John M. Cooper. Pp. 127-168, pls. 33-40, figs. 18-20. The Huarpe, by Salvador Canals Frau. Pp. 169-175, figs. 21-22. Indians of the Parané Delta and La Plata Littoral, by S. K. Lothrop. Pp. 177-190, fig. 23. The Charrua, by Antonio Serrano. Pp. 191-196, pls. 41-44. LIST OF PUBLICATIONS a Part 2. Indians of the Gran Chaco. Ethnography of the Chaco, by Alfred Métraux. Pp. 197-370, pls. 45-76, figs. 24-42, maps 4-5. The present-day Indians of the Gran Chaco, by Juan Belaieff. Pp. 371-380. Eastern Brazil: An introduction, by Robert H. Lowie. Pp. 381-397, map 7. Lagoa Santa Man, by Annibal Mattos. Pp. 399-400. The sambaqufs of the Brazilian coast, by Antonio Serrano. Pp. 401-407, pls. 77-80, figs. 43-46, map 6. The Guaté, by Alfred Métraux. Pp. 409-418, pls. 81-82, figs. 47-50. The Bororo, by Robert H. Lowie. Pp. 419-434, pls. 83-94, figs. 51-55. Guayaki, by Alfred Métraux and Herbert Baldus. Pp. 435-444, pls. 95-96. The Caingang, by Alfred Métraux. Pp. 445-475, figs. 56-60. The Northwestern and Central Ge, by Robert H. Lowie. Pp. 477-517, pls. 97-104, figs. 61-67. The Southern Cayapé6, by Robert H. Lowie. Pp. 519-520. The Guaitacd, by Alfred Métraux. Pp. 521-522. The Purf-Coroado linguistic family, by Alfred Métraux. Pp. 522-530, fig. 68. The Botocudo, by Alfred Métraux. Pp. 531-540. The Mashacali, Patashé, and Malalf linguistic families, by Alfred Métraux. Pp. 541-545. The Camacan linguistic family, by Alfred Métraux and Curt Nimuendaji. Pp. 547-552. The “‘Tapuya,” by Robert H. Lowie. Pp. 553-556, fig. 69. The Cariri, by Robert H. Lowie. Pp. 557-559. The Pancarart, by Robert H. Lowie. P. 561. The Tarairiu, by Robert H. Lowie. Pp. 563-566. The Jeico, by Robert H. Lowie. P. 567. The Guck, by Robert H. Lowie. P. 569. The Fulnio, by Alfred Métraux. P. 571. The Teremembé, by Alfred Métraux. Pp. 573-574. (Followed by pls. 105-112, illustrating various Indian tribes described in preceding papers.) Bibliography to Volume 1. Pp. 575-624. Volume 2. The Andean civilizations. xxx1v+1035 pp., 192 pls., 100 figs., 1l maps. 1946. Out of print. Preface, by Julian H. Steward. Pp. xxv-xxxr. Map 1. Part 1. The Andean Highlands: An introduction, by Wendell C. Bennett. Pp. 1-60, pls. 1-16. Part 2. The Central Andes. The archeology of the Central Andes, by Wendell C. Bennett. Pp. 61-147, pls. 17-60, figs. 1-18, map 2. A culture sequence for the North Coast of Peri, by Rafael Larco Hoyle. Pp. 149-175, pls. 61-72, figs. 20-22. Cuzco archeology, by Luis E. Valcércel. Pp. 177-182, pls. 73-76. Inca culture at the time of the Spanish conquest, by John Howland Rowe. Pp: 183-330, pls. 77-84, figs. 23-29, maps 3, 4. BUREAU OF AMERICAN ETHNOLOGY The Quechua in the Colonial world, by George Kubler. Pp. 331-410, pls. 85-92, figs. 39-43. The contemporary Quechua, by Bernard Mishkin. Pp. 411-470. pls. 93-100. The Andean calendar, by Luis E. Valed4rcel. Pp. 471-476. Indian markets and fairs in Peri, by Luis E. Valedrcel. Pp. 477-482. Social and economico-political evolution of the communities of Central Pert, by Hildebrando Castro Pozo. Pp. 483-499. The Aymara, by Harry Tschopik, Jr. Pp. 501-573, pls. 101-112, figs. 44-48. The Uru-Chipaya, by Weston La Barre. Pp. 575-585, pls. 113-120. Part 3. The Southern Andes. The cultural sequence of the North Chilean Coast, by Junius B. Bird. Pp. 587-594, pls. 121-128, fig. 49. The historic inhabitants of the North Chilean Coast, by Junius B. Bird. Pp. 595-597. The Atacamefio, by Wendell C. Bennett. Pp. 599-618, pls. 129-134. The cultures of the Puna and the Quebrada of Humahuaca, by Eduardo Casanova. Pp. 619-631, pls. 135-138, figs. 50-58. The Diaguita of Chile, by Samuel K. Lothrop. Pp. 633-636, pls. 139-140. The Diaguita of Argentina, by Fernando Mdrquez Miranda. Pp. 637-654, pls. 141-146, figs. 59-63, map 5. The Chaco-Santiagueno culture, by Fernando Md4rquez Miranda. Pp. 655-660, pls. 147-148. The culture of La Candelaria, by Gordon R. Willey. Pp. 661- 672, figs. 64-68. The Comechingén and their neighbors of the Sierras de Cérdoba, by Francisco de Aparicio. Pp. 673-685, pls. 149-152, figs. 69-70. The Araucanians, by John M. Cooper. Pp. 687-760, pls. 153- 156, figs. 71-85. Expansion of the Araucanians in Argentina, by Salvador Canals Frau. Pp. 761-766. Part 4. The Northern Andes. The archeology of Ecuador, by Donald Collier. Pp. 767-784, pls. 157-160, figs. 86-90, map 6. The historic tribes of Ecuador, by John Murra. Pp. 785-821, pls. 161-168, map 7. The archeology of Colombia, by Wendell C. Bennett. Pp. 823- 850, pls. 169-176, figs. 91-97, map 8. The archeology of San Agustin and Tierradentro, Colombia, by Gregorio Hernandez de Alba. Pp. 851-859, figs. 98-99. The archeology of the Popaydn region, Colombia, by Henri Lehmann. Pp. 861-864, fig. 100. Tribes of the Sierra Nevada de Santa Marta, Colombia, by Willard Z. Park. Pp. 865-886, pls. 177-184. The Chibcha, by A. L. Kroeber. Pp. 887-909, map 9. The native tribes and languages of southwestern Colombia, by Sergio Elias Ortiz. Pp. 911-914, maps 10, 11. LIST OF PUBLICATIONS 29 The Highland tribes of southern Colombia, by Gregorio Her- ndndez de Alba. Pp. 915-960, pls. 185-192. The modern Quillacinga, Pasto, and Coaiquer, by Sergio Elfas Ortiz. Pp. 961-968. The Moguex-Coconuco, by Henri Lehmann. Pp. 969-974. Glossary. Pp. 975-978. Bibliography to Volume 2. Pp. 979-1035. Volume 3. The Tropical Forest tribes. xxv1+986 pp., 126 pls., 134 figs., 8 maps. 1948. Out of print. Preface, by Julian H. Steward. Pp. xxr-xxtv. Map 1. The tropical forests: An introduction, by Robert H. Lowie. Pp. 1-56, pls. 1-8, figs. 1-3. Part 1. The Coastal and Amazonian Tupf. The archeology of the Parané River, by Francisco de Aparicio. Pp. 57-67, pls. 9-10, figs. 3-4. The Guarani, by Alfred Métraux. Pp. 69-94, pls. 11-12, fig. 5. The Tupinamba, by Alfred Métraux. Pp. 95-133, figs. 6-15. The Guaja, by Curt Nimuendaji. Pp. 135-136. The Tenetehara, by Charles Wagley and Eduardo Galvao. Pp. 137-148, pls. 13-14. The archeology of the Amazon Basin, by Betty J. Meggers. Pp. 149-166, pls. 15-18, figs. 16-17, map 2. The Tapirapé, by Charles Wagley and Eduardo Galvao. Pp. 167-178, pl. 19. The Carajé, by William Lipkind. Pp. 179-191, pls. 20-22, figs. 18-24. The Turiwara and Arua, by Curt Nimuendajid. Pp. 193-198. The Amanayé, by Curt Nimuendajii and Alfred Métraux. Pp. 199-202. Little-known tribes of the lower Tocantins River region, by Curt Nimuendaji. Pp. 203-208. Little-known tribes of the lower Amazon, by Curt Nimuendajd. Pp. 209-211. Tribes of the lower and middle Xing River, by Curt Nimuendaji. Pp. 213-248, figs. 25-31. The Maué and Arapium, by Curt Nimuendaji. Pp. 245-254. The Mura and Pirahé, by Curt Nimuendaji. Pp. 255-269. The Munduructi, by Donald Horton. Pp. 271-282, pl. 23. The Cawahib, Parintintin, and their neighbors, by Curt Nimuen- daji. Pp. 283-297, map 3. The Tup{-Cawahfb, by Claude Lévi-Strauss. Pp. 299-305, pls. 24-26. The Cayabf, Tapanyuna, and Apiacé, by Curt Nimuendaji. Pp. 307-320. The tribes of the upper Xingé River, by Claude Lévi-Strauss. Pp. 321-348, pls. 27-34, figs. 32-42. Part 2. The tribes of Mato Grosso and eastern Bolivia. The Paressf, by Alfred Métraux. Pp. 249-360, pl. 35, figs. 43-44. The Nambicuara, by Claude Lévi-Strauss. Pp. 361-369, pls. 36-37. Tribes of the right bank of the Guaporé River, by Claude Lévi- Strauss. Pp. 371-379, pl. 38, figs. 45-48. 30 BUREAU OF AMERICAN ETHNOLOGY Tribes of eastern Bolivia and the Madeira headwaters, by Alfred Métraux. Pp. 381-454, pls. 39-40, figs. 49-56, map 4. The Sirioné, by Allan Holmberg. Pp. 455-463. Tribes of the eastern slopes of the Bolivian Andes, by Alfred Métraux. Pp. 465-506, pls. 41-47, figs. 57-71. Part 3. Tribes of the Montafia and Bolivian East Andes. Tribes of the Montafia: An introduction, by Julian H. Steward. Pp. 507-533, figs. 72-75, maps 5, 6. Tribes of the Peruvian and Ecuadorian Montaiia, by Julian H. Steward and Alfred Métraux. Pp. 535-656, pls. 48-63, figs. 76-93. Part 4. Tribes of the western Amazon Basin. Tribes of the Jurud-Purds Basins, by Alfred Métraux. Pp. 657-686, figs. 94-101. Tribes of the middle and upper Amazon River, by Alfred Métraux. Pp. 687-712, figs. 102-103. The Tucuna, by Curt Nimuendaji. Pp. 713-725, pls. 64-65. The Peban tribes, by Julian H. Steward and Alfred Métraux. Pp. 727-736, pls. 66-79. Western Tucanoan tribes, by Julian H. Steward. Pp. 737-748, pl. 80. The Witotoan tribes, by Julian H. Steward. Pp. 749-762, pls. 81-88, figs. 104-106. Tribes of the Uaupés-Caqueté region, by Irving Goldman. Pp. 763-798, pls. 89-104, figs. 107-118. Part 5. Tribes of the Guianas and the left Amazon tributaries. Tribes of the Guianas, by John Gillin. Pp. 799-860, pls. 105-124, figs. 119-133, map 7. The hunting and gathering tribes of the Rio Negro Basin, by Alfred Métraux. Pp. 861-867, pls. 125-126. The Warrau, by Paul Kirchhoff. Pp. 869-881, fig. 134. Part 6. Culture areas of the Tropical Forests, by Julian H. Steward. Pp. 883-899, map 8. Glossary. Pp. 901-902. Bibliography to Volume 3. Pp. 903-986. Volume 4. The Circum-Caribbean tribes. xx-+609 pp., 98 pls., 79 figs., 11 maps. 1948. Out of print. Preface, by Julian H. Steward. Pp. xv-xvu. Map 1. The Cireum-Caribbean tribes: An introduction, by Julian H. Steward. Pp. 1-41. Part 1. Central American cultures. Central American cultures: An introduction, by Frederick Johnson. Pp. 43-68, map 2. The archeology of Central America. The archeology of Central America: An introduction, by Wm. Duncan Strong. Pp. 69-70. The archeology of Honduras, by Wm. Duncan Strong. Pp. 71-120, pls. 1-12, figs. 1-15, map 3. The archeology of Costa Rica and Nicaragua, by Wm. Duncan Strong. Pp. 121-142, pls. 13-18, figs. 16-26. The archeology of Panamd, by Samuel K. Lothrop. Pp. 143-167, pls. 19-20, figs. 27-47, map 4. LIST OF PUBLICATIONS 31 The basic cultures of Central America, by Doris Stone. Pp. 169-193, pls. 21-32. The post-Conquest ethnology of Central America. The post-Conquest ethnology of Central America: An intro- duction, by Frederick Johnson. Pp. 195-198, map 5. The Meso-American Division, by Frederick Johnson. Pp. 199-204. The northern Highland tribes: The Lenca, by Doris Stone. Pp. 205-217, pls. 33-34, figs. 48-49. The Caribbean Lowland tribes: The Mosquito, Sumo, Paya, and Jicaque, by Paul Kirchhoff. Pp. 219-229, pls. 35-36. The Caribbean Lowland tribes. The Talamanca Division, by Frederick Johnson. Pp. 231-251, pls. 37-38, figs. 50-57. The tribes west and south of the Panamd4 Canal, by Samuel K. Lothrop. Pp. 253-256. The Cuna, by David B. Stout. Pp. 257-268, pls. 49-56. figs. 58-60. The Chocé, by David B. Stout. Pp. 269-276, figs. 61-66. The Cayapa and Colorado, by John Murra. Pp. 277-291, pls. 57-60. Anthropological needs and possibilities in Central America, by Wm. Duncan Strong and Frederick Johnson. Pp. 293-296. Part 2. The cultures of Northwest South America. Sub-Andean tribes of the Cauca Valley, by Gregorio Herndndez de Alba. Pp. 297-327. Tribes of the North Colombia Lowlands, by Gregorio Hernandez de Alba. Pp. 329-338. Patdngoro and Amanf, by Paul Kirchhoff. Pp. 339-348. The northeastern extension of Andean culture, by Alfred Métraux and Paul Kirchhoff. Pp. 349-368, pls. 61-71, fig. 67, map 6. The Goajiro, by John M. Armstrong and Alfred Métraux. Pp. 369-383, pl. 72. The Guayupé and Sae, by Paul Kirchhoff. Pp. 385-391. The Betoi and their neighbors, by Gregorio Herndndez de Alba. Pp. 393-398. The Achagua and their neighbors, by Gregorio Herndndez de Alba. Pp. 399-412. The archeology of Venezuela, by Alfred Kidder II. Pp. 413-438, pls. 73-76, figs. 68-77, map 7. The Otomac, by Paul Kirchhoff. Pp. 439-444. Food-gathering tribes of the Venezuelan Llanos, by Paul Kirch- hoff. Pp. 445-468, pls. 77-78, figs. 78-79. Tribes of northwestern Venezuela, by Gregorio Herndndez de Alba. Pp. 469-474. The tribes of North Central Venezuela, by Gregorio Herndndez de Alba. Pp. 475-479. The tribes north of the Orinoco River, by Paul Kirchhoff. Pp. 481-493. Part 3. The West Indies. The West Indies: An introduction, by Irving Rouse. Pp. 495- 496. BUREAU OF AMERICAN ETHNOLOGY The Ciboney, by Irving Rouse. Pp. 497-505, pls. 79-85, maps 8, 9. (Including ‘‘The Ethnography of the Ciboney,” by Pedro Garcia Valdes, pp. 503-505.) © The Arawak, by Irving Rouse. Pp. 507-546, pls. 86-92, maps 10, 11. (Including “The Ethnography of the Ciboney,” by Adolfo de Hostos, pp. 540-542.) The Carib, by Irving Rouse. Pp. 547-564, pls. 93-98. Bibliography to Volume 4. Pp. 567-609. Volume 5. The comparative ethnology of South American Indians. xxv1+818 pp., 56 pls., 190 figs., 22 maps. 1949. Out of print. Part 1. A cross-cultural survey of South American Indian tribes. Architecture and engineering. Habitations, by Wendell C. Bennett. Pp. 1-20, pls. 1-3, figs. 1-4. Household furniture, by Wendell C. Bennett. Pp. 21-27. Religious structures, by Wendell C. Bennett. Pp. 29-51, pls. 4-9, figs. 5-12. Engineering, by Wendell C. Bennett. Pp. 53-65, pls. 10-16. Manufactures and technology. Bark cloth, by Alfred Métraux. Pp. 67-68. Basketry, by Lila M. O’Neale. Pp. 69-96, pls. 17-23, figs. 13-25. Weaving, by Lila M. O’Neale. Pp. 97-138, pls. 24-28, figs. 26-41. Ceramics, by Gordon R. Willey. Pp. 139-204, pls. 29-40, figs. 42-63, maps 1-3. Metallurgy, by William C. Root. Pp. 205-225. Rubber, by Alfred Métraux. Pp. 227-228. Weapons, by Alfred Métraux. Pp. 229-263, figs. 64-67, maps 4-6. Traps, by John M. Cooper. Pp. 265-276, figs. 68-77, map 7. Fish poisons, by Robert F. Heizer. Pp. 277-281. Fire making, by John M. Cooper. Pp. 283-292, figs. 78-86, map 8. Social and political life. The social and political organization of the Andean peoples, by Paul Kirchhoff. Pp. 293-311. Social and political organization of the Tropical Forest and Marginal tribes, by Robert H. Lowie. Pp. 313-350. Property among the Tropical Forest and Marginal tribes, by Robert H. Lowie. Pp. 351-367. The couvade, by Alfred Métraux. Pp. 369-374. Boys’ initiation rites, by Alfred Métraux. Pp. 375-382. Warfare, cannibalism, and human trophies, by Alfred Métraux. Pp. 383-409. Esthetic and recreational activities. Art, by A. L. Kroeber. Pp. 411-492, pls. 41-48, figs. 87-160. Petroglyphs, by Irving Rouse. Pp. 493-502, pls. 49-52, figs. 161-165. Games and gambling, by John M. Cooper. Pp. 503-524, figs. 166-179. Stimulants and narcotics, by John M. Cooper. Pp. 525-558, figs. 180-185, maps 9-15. LIST OF PUBLICATIONS 33 Religion and shamanism, by Alfred Métraux. Pp. 559-599. Lore and learning. Numbers, measures, weights, and calendars, by Wendell C. Bennett. Pp. 601-610, fig. 186. Mnemonie and recording devices, by Wendell C. Bennett. Pp. 611-619, pls. 53-54, fig. 187. Medical practices, by Erwin H. Ackerknecht. Pp. 621-643, pls. 55-56, figs. 188-190. Part 2. Jesuit missions in South America, by Alfred Métraux. Pp. 645-653. Part 3. The native population of South America, by Julian H. Steward. Pp. 655-668, maps 16-17. Part 4. South American cultures: An interpretative summary, by Julian H. Steward. Pp. 669-772, maps 18-22. Glossary. Pp. 773-782. Bibliography to Volume 5. Pp. 783-818. Volume 6. Physical anthropology, linguistics, and cultural geography of South American Indians. xn1+715 pp., 47 pls., 3 figs., 18 maps. 1950. Out of print. Preface, by Julian H. Steward. Pp. x—xm. Part 1. Ancient man. The antiquity of man in South America, by Theodore D. McCown. Pp. 1-9, pls: 1-2. The present status of the theories concerning primitive man in Argentina, by Joaquin Frenguelli. Pp. 11-17, pls. 3-4, fig. 1. Part 2. Physical anthropology. T. Dale Stewart, editor. Skeletal remains of South American Indians. Anthropometry of South American Indian skeletal remains, by T. Dale Stewart and Marshall T. Newman. Ep: 19-42, pls. 5-8, maps 1-3. Deformity, trephining, and mutilation in South American Indian skeletal remains, by T. Dale Stewart. Pp. 43-48. Pathological changes in South American Indian skeletal remains, by T. Dale Stewart. Pp. 49-52, pls. 9-12. Cephalic deformations of the Indians in Argentina, by José Imbelloni. Pp. 53-55, pls. 13-14, fig. 2. The living South American Indians. Anthropometry of South American Indians, by Morris Steggerda. Pp. 57-69, pls. 15-22, maps 4-5. The anthropometry of the Indians of Brazil, by José Bastos d’Avila. Pp. 71-84, pl. 23. The pigmentation and hair of South American Indians, by Morris Steggerda. Pp. 85-90. Blood groups of South American Indians, by William C. Boyd. Pp. 91-95, map 6. The basal metabolic rates of South American Indians, by Elsie A. Wilson. Pp. 97-104. South American Mestizos. Mestizos of South America, by Morris Steggerda. Pp. 105-109. Brazilian Mestizo types, by Maria Julia Pourchet. Pp. 111-120. 34 BUREAU OF AMERICAN ETHNOLOGY The physical anthropology of Chile. The anthropometry of the Indians of Chile, by Carlos Henckel. Pp. 121-135, pls. 24-27. The geographical pathology of Chile, by Ernesto Herzog. Pp. 137-144. The physical anthropology of the internal organs among the races of Chile, by Carlos Henckel. Pp. 145-156, fig. 3. Glossary to Part 2. Part 3. The languages of South American Indians, by J. Alden Mason. Pp. 157-317. Part 4. Geography and plant and animal resources. The geography of South America, by Carl O. Sauer. Pp. 319-344, pls. 28-35, maps 7-10. Fauna and ethnozoology of South America, by Raymond M. Gilmore. Pp. 345-464, pls. 36-47, maps 11-17. The use of wild plants in tropical South America, by Claude Lévi-Strauss. Pp. 465-486. Cultivated plants of South and Central America, by Carl O. Sauer. Pp. 487-543. Bibliography to Volume 6. Pp. 545-715. 144. The Northern and Central Nootkan tribes, by Philip Drucker. 1x-+ 480 pp., 5 pls., 28 figs., 8 maps. 1951. 145. The Indian tribes of North America, by John R. Swanton. vi+ 726 pp., 5 maps. 1952. Out of print. 146. Chippewa child life and its cultural background, by Sister M. Inez Hilger. x1v-+204 pp., 31 pls., 1 fig. 1951. 147. Journal of an expedition to the Mauvaises Terres and the Upper Missouri in 1850, by Thaddeus A. Culbertson. Edited by John Francis McDermott. vu1+164 pp., 2 maps. 1952. 148. Arapaho child life and its cultural background, by Sister M. Inez Hilger. xv+253 pp., 40 pls., 1 fig. 1952. 149. Symposium on local diversity in Iroquois culture, edited by William N. Fenton. v+187 pp., 21 figs. 1951. No. 1. Introduction: The concept of locality and the program of Iroquois research, by William N. Fenton. Pp. 1-12. No. 2. Concepts of land ownership among the Iroquois and their neighbors, by George S. Snyderman. Pp. 13-34. No. 3 Locality as a basic factor in the development of Iroquois social structure, by William N. Fenton. Pp. 35-54. No. 4. Some psychological determinants of culture change in an Iroquoian community, by Anthony F. C. Wallace. Pp. 55-76. No. 5. The religion of Handsome Lake: Its origin and development, by Merle H. Deardorff. Pp. 77-107. No. 6. Local diversity in Iroquois music and dance, by Gertrude P. Kurath. Pp. 109-137. No. 7. The Feast of the Dead, or Ghost Dance, at Six Nations Reserve, Canada, by William N. Fenton and Gertrude P. Kurath. Pp. 139-165. No. 8. Iroquois women, then and now, by Martha Champion Randle. Pp. 167-180. LIST OF PUBLICATIONS 35 150. The modal personality structure of the Tuscarora Indians as revealed by the Rorschach test, by Anthony C. Wallace. vur+120 pp., 1 pl., 8 figs. 1952. 151. Anthropological papers, numbers 33-42. 1x+507 pp., 37 pls., 25 figs., 7 maps. 1953. Papers available in separate form. No. 33. Of the Crow Nation, by Edwin Thompson Denig, edited with biographical sketch and footnotes by John C. Ewers. Pp. 1-74, pls. 1-6, map 1. No. 34. The water lily in Maya art: a complex of alleged Asiatic origin, by Robert L. Rands. Pp. 75-153, figs. 1-6. No. 35. The medicine bundles of the Florida Seminole and the Green Corn Dance, by Louis Capron. Pp. 155-210, pls. 7-15, figs. 7-10. No. 36. Technique in the music of the American Indian, by Frances Densmore. Pp. 213-216. No. 37. The belief of the Indian in a connection between song and the supernatural, by Frances Densmore. Pp. 217-223. No. 38. Aboriginal fish poisons, by Robert F. Heizer. Pp. 225-283, pls. 16-19, maps 2-4. No. 39. Aboriginal navigation off the coasts of Upper and Baja California, by Robert F. Heizer and William C. Massey. Pp. 285-311, pls. 20-23, figs. 11 and 12, maps 5-7. No. 40. Exploration of an Adena Mound at Natrium, West Virginia, by Ralph 8. Solecki. Pp. 313-395, pls. 24-29, figs. 13-19. No. 41. The Wind River Shoshone Sun Dance, by D. B. Shimkin. Pp. 397-484, pls. 30-37, figs. 20-25. No. 42. Current trends in the Wind River Shoshone Sun Dance, by Fred W. Voget. Pp. 485-499. 152. Index to Schoolcraft’s ‘Indian tribes of the United States,’’ com- piled by Frances 8. Nichols. vi+257 pp. 1954. 153. La Venta, Tabasco: a study of Olmec ceramics and art, by Philip Drucker. With a chapter on structural investigations in 1943, by Waldo R. Wedel, and appendix on technological analyses, by Anna O. Shepard. x+257 pp., 66 pls., 64 figs. 1952. Out of print. 154. River Basin Surveys Papers, Nos. 1-6. xv+336 pp., 56 pls., 40 figs. 1953. Papers available in separate form. No. 1. Prehistory and the Missouri Valley development program: summary report on the Missouri River Basin archeological survey in 1948, by Waldo R. Wedel. Pp. xv—xvin, 1-59, pls. 1-12, fig. 1. No. 2. Prehistory and the Missouri Valley development program: summary report on the Missouri River Basin archeological survey in 1949, by Waldo R. Wedel. Pp. 61-101, pls. 13-15. No. 3. The Woodruff ossuary, a prehistory burial site in Phillips County, Kansas, by Marvin F. Kivett. Pp. 103-141, pls. 16-28, figs. 2-3. No. 4. The Addicks dam site: I. An archeological survey of the Addicks Dam Basin, southeast Texas, by Joe Ben Wheat. Pp. 143-252, pls. 29-47, figs. 4-23. 36 BUREAU OF AMERICAN ETHNOLOGY II. Indian skeletal remains from the Doering and Kobs sites, Addicks Reservoir, Texas, by Marshall T. Newman. Pp. 253-266, figs. 24-28. No. 5. The Hodges site: I. Two rock shelters near Tucumcari, New Mexico, by Herbert W. Dick. Pp. 267-284, pls. 48-54, figs. 29-30. II. Geology of the Hodges site, Quay County, New Mexico, by Sheldon Judson. Pp. 285-302, figs. 31-35. No. 6. The Rembert mounds, Elbert County, Georgia, by Joseph R. Caldwell. Pp. 303-320, pls. 55-56, figs. 36-40. 155. Prehistoric settlement patterns in the Virt Valley, Peru, by Gordon R. Willey. xx11+453 pp., 60 pls., 88 figs. 1953. 156. The Iroquois Eagle Dance, an offshoot of the Calumet Dance, by William N. Fenton, with an analysis of the Iroquois Eagle Dance and songs, by Gertrude Prokosch Kurath. v1+324 pp., 28 pls., 36 figs. 1953. Out of print. 157. Anthropological Papers, numbers 43-48. 111+415 pp., 76 pls., 23 figs. 1955. Out of print. No. 43. Stone monuments of the Rio Chiquito, Veracruz, Mexico, by Matthew W. Stirling. Pp. 1-23, pls. 1-26, fig. 1. Out of print. No. 44. The Cero de las Mesas offering of jade and other materials, by Philip Drucker. Pp. 25-68, pls. 27-54, figs. 2-9. No. 45. Archeological materials from the vicinity of Mobridge, South Dakota, by Waldo R. Wedel. Pp. 69-188, pls. 55-71, figs. 10-12. No. 46. The original Strachey vocabulary of the Virginia Indian language, by John P. Harrington. Pp. 189-202, 16 sheets of vocabulary with 16 keys. No. 47. The Sun Dance of the Northern Ute, by J. A. Jones. Pp. 203- 263, fig. 13. No. 48. Some manifestations of water in Mesoamerican art, by Robert L. Rands. Pp. 265-393, pls. 72-76, figs. 14-23. All papers except No. 43 available in separate form. 158. River Basin Surveys Papers, No. 7: Archeological investigations in the Oahe Dam area, South Dakota, 1950-51, by Donald J. Lehmer. With appendixes by Theodore E. White, and Norton H. Nickerson and Ding Hou. x1+190 pp., 22 pls., 56 figs., 6 maps. 1954. 159. The horse in Blackfoot Indian culture, with comparative material from other western tribes, by John C. Ewers. xv+374 pp., 17 pls., 33 figs. 1955. 160. A ceramic study of Virginia archeology, by Clifford Evans. With appendix, An analysis of projectile points and large blades, by C. G. Holland. vit+195 pp., 30 pls., 23 figs. 1955. 161. Seminole music, by Frances Densmore. xxvi1I+224 pp., 18 pls., 1 fig., 1 map, 243 music scores. In press. 162. Guaymi grammar, by Ephraim 8. Alphonse. 1x+128 pp. In press. 163. The Diné: Origin myths of the Navaho Indians, by Aileen O’Bryan. vi1+194 pp. 1956. LIST OF PUBLICATIONS ae 164. Anthropological papers, numbers 49-56. Jn press. No. 49. The Ormond Beach Mound, East Central Florida, by Jesse D. Jennings, Gordon R. Willey, and Marshall T. Newman. No. 50. Hair pipes in Plains Indian adornment, a study in Indian and White ingenuity, by John C. Ewers. No. 51. Observations on some nineteenth-century pottery vessels from the Upper Missouri, by Waldo R. Wedel. No. 52. Revaluation of the Eastern Siouan problem, with particular emphasis on the Virginia branches—the Occaneechi, the Saponi, and the Tutelo, by Carl F. Miller. No. 53. Archeological reconnaissance of Tabasco and Campeche, by Matthew W. Stirling. No. 54. Valladolid Maya enumeration, by John P. Harrington. No. 55. Letters to Jack Wilson, the Paiute Prophet, written between 1908 and 1911, edited and with an introduction by Grace M. Dangberg. No. 56. Factionalism at Taos Pueblo, New Mexico, by William N. Fenton. 165. Music of Acoma, Isleta, Cochiti, and Zufii Pueblos, by Frances Densmore. In press. 166. River Basin Surveys Papers, No. 8: Excavations in the McNary Reservoir Basin near Umatilla, Oregon, by Douglas Osborne. With appendixes by Marshall T. Newman, Arthur Woodward, W. J. Kroll, and B. H. McLeod. Jn press. 167. Archeological investigations at the mouth of the Amazon, by Betty J. Meggers and Clifford Evans. In press. I. 9 ae ay, 4, 5. = 10. Ls 12. 13. 14. 15. 16. PUBLICATIONS OF THE INSTITUTE OF SOCIAL ANTHROPOLOGY Houses and house use of the Sierra Tarascans, by Ralph L. Beals, Pedro Carrasco, and Thomas McCorkle. x-+87 pp., 8 pls., 20 figs. 1944. Cheran: a Sierra Tarascan village, by Ralph L. Beals. x+225 pp., 8 pls., 19 figs., 5 maps. 1946. Moche: a Peruvial coastal community, by John Gillin. vit+166 pp., 26 pls., 8 figs., 1 map. 1947. Cultural and historical geography of southwest Guatemala, by Felix Webster McBryde. xv+184 pp., 47 pls., 2 figs., 25 maps. 1947. Out of print. Highland communities of central Peru, by Harry Tschopik, Jr. vit +56 pp., 16 pls., 2 maps. 1947. Empire’s children: the people of Tzintzuntzan, by George M. Foster assisted by Gabriel Ospina. v-+297 pp., 16 pls., 36 figs., 2 maps. 1948. . Cultural geography of the modern Tarascan area, by Robert C. West. vi+77 pp., 14 pls., 6 figs., 21 maps. 1948. . Sierra Popoluca speech, by Mary L. Foster and George M. Foster. wi+45 pp. 1948. . The Terena and Caduveo of southern Mato Grosso, Brazil, by Kalervo Oberg. 3Iv+72 pp., 24 pls., 2 charts, 4 maps. 1949. Nomads of the long bow: the Siriono of eastern Bolivia, by Allan R. Holmberg. 1tv+104 pp., 7 pls., 4 charts, 1 map. 1950. Out of print. Quiroga: a Mexican municipio, by Donald D. Brand. v+242 pp., 35 pls., 4 maps. 1951. Cruz das Almas: a Brazilian village, by Donald Pierson. x-+226 pp., 20 pls., 13 figs., 2 maps. 1951. The Tajin Totonac: Part 1. History, subsistence, shelter, and tech- nology, by Isabel Kelly and Angel Palerm. x1v+369 pp., 33 pls., 69 figs., 18 maps. 1952. The Indian caste of Peru, 1795-1940: a population study based upon tax records and census reports, by George Kubler. vi+71 pp., 2 pls., 1 fig., 20 maps. 1952. Indian tribes of northern Mato Grosso, Brazil, by Kalervo Oberg. With an appendix entitled “Anthropometry of the Umotina, Nambi- cuara, and Iranxe, with comparative data from other northern Mato Grosso tribes,” by Marshall T. Newman. vui+144 pp., 10 pls., 2 figs., 14 charts, 3 maps. 1953. Penny capitalism, a Guatemalan Indian economy, by Sol Tax. x+ 230 pp., 6 maps, 19 charts. 1953. 22 dd CONTRIBUTIONS TO NORTH AMERICAN ETHNOLOGY (All the volumes of this group except vol. 6 are out of print) Contributions to North American ethnology, by J. W. Powell, Geolo- gist in Charge, Geographical and Geological Survey of the Rocky Moun- tain Region, U. 8. Department of the Interior. 4°. Vols. 1-3. Contributions to North American ethnology, by J. W. Powell, Director, Bureau of Ethnology, Smithsonian Institution. 4°. Vols. 4-7, 9. VouuME 1, 1877: Part 1. Tribes of the extreme Northwest, by W. H. Dall. Pp. 1-156, illus. On the distribution and nomenclature of the native tribes of Alaska and the adjacent territory. On succession in the shell-heaps of the Aleutian Islands. On the origin of the Innuit. Appendix to part 1. Linguistics. 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, Terms of relationship used by the Innuit: a series obtained from natives of Cumberland inlet, by W. H. Dall. Vocabularies [by George Gibbs and W. H. Dall]. Note on the use of numerals among the T’sim si-an’, by George Gibbs, M. D. Part u. Tribes of western Washington and northwestern Oregon, by George Gibbs, M. D. Pp. 157-361, pocket map. Appendix to part 1. Linguistics. Vocabularies [by George Gibbs, Wm. F. Tolmie, and G. Mengarini]. Dictionary of the Niskwalli [Niskwalli-English and English-Nisk- walli], by George Gibbs. VoLuME 2, 1890 [1891]: The Klamath Indians of southwestern Oregon, by Albert Samuel Gatschet. 2 vols. VOLUME 3, 1877: Tribes of California, by Stephen Powers. 635 pp., frontispiece, 44 figs. (inel. 42 pls.), 3 pp. music, pocket map. Appendix. Linguistics, edited by J. W. Powell. Pp. 439-613. Vo.uME 4, 1881: Houses and house-life of the American aborigines, by Lewis H. Morgan. x1v-+281 pp., frontispiece, 56 figs. (incl. 28 pls.). VouuME 5, 1882: Observations on cup-shaped and other lapidarian sculptures in the Old World and in America, by Charles Rau. 112 pp., 61 figs. (forming 35 pls.). 1881. On prehistoric trephining and cranial amulets, by Robert Fletcher, M. R. C. 8S. Eng., act. asst. surgeon, U.S. Army. 32 pp., 9 pls., 2 figs. 1882. A study of the manuscript Troano, by Cyrus Thomas, Ph. D., with an 39 40 BUREAU OF AMERICAN ETHNOLOGY introduction by D. G. Brinton, M. D. [The graphic system and ancient method of the Mayas.] xxxvi1+237 pp., 9 pls., 101 figs., 25 small unnumbered cuts. 1882. VouLuME 6, 1890 [1892]: The Gegiha language, by James Owen Dorsey. xvur-+-794 pp. VotuME 7, 1890 [1892]: A Dakota-English dictionary, by Stephen Return Riggs, edited by James Owen Dorsey. x-+665 pp. VouumE 8: Not published. VoLuME 9, 1893 [1894]: Dakota grammar, texts, and ethnography, by Stephen Return Riggs, edited by James Owen Dorsey. xxx1I-+239 pp. INTRODUCTIONS ! (In quarto size) (All volumes of this group 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.] | 104 pp., 10 blank leaves. 1877. Second edition as follows: (2) Introduction to the study of Indian languages, with words, phrases, and sentences to be collected, by J. W. Powell. Second edition. x1+228 pp., 10 blank leaves, 4 kinship charts in pocket. A 16° “Alphabet” of 2 leaves accompanies the work. 1880. (3) Introduction 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. tIv+72 pp., 33 unnum- bered figs. 1880. (4) Introduction to the study of mortuary customs among the North American Indians, by Dr. H. C. Yarrow, act. asst. surg., U. S. Army. 1x+114 pp. 1880. 1 The numbers in parentheses are given for convenience in reference. MISCELLANEOUS PUBLICATIONS ? (All the publications in this group except Nos. 8, 10, and 11 are out of print) (1) A collection of gesture-signs and signals of the North American Indians with some comparisons, by Garrick Mallery, brevet lieut. col. and formerly acting chief signal officer, U.S. Army. 4°. 329pp. 1880. Note.—250 copies printed for use of collaborators only. (2) Proof-sheets of a bibliography of the languages of the North American Indians, by James Constantine Pilling. (Distributed only to collaborators.) 4°. xu+1135 pp., 29 pls. (facsimiles). 1885. Notre.—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 10 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. 16°. 55 pp. [1885. ] Norr.—A few copies printed for the use of the compilers of a Dictionary of American Indians [Handbook. See Bulletin 30]. 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.] Nore.—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 Note 7.) (5) Tribes of North America, with synonymy. Skittagetan family. 4°. 13 pp. [1890.] Notrre.—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 head, ‘‘Dictionary of Indian tribal names.” (See Bulletin 30.) (6) [Advance pages] Dictionary of American Indians north of Mexico io fos pes, 1903: Norr.—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}. 2 The numbers in parentheses are given for convenience in reference. 41 42 BUREAU OF AMERICAN ETHNOLOGY (7) [Map of] Linguistic stocks of American Indians north of Mexico, by J. W. Powell. [1906. ] Nore.—Printed on heavy paper in advance of the Handbook of American Indians (Bulletin 30), part 1, of which it forms an illustration. (8) Article on Bureau of American Ethnology (with list of publications). [By W. H. Holmes.] Reprinted from Handbook of American Indians, Bulletin 30 (pt. 1), pp. 171-176, Bureau of American Ethnology. 8°. 5®pp. [1906. ] (9) Indian missions north of Mexico, by James Mooney. Reprinted from Handbook of American Indians, Bulletin 30 (pt. 1), Bureau of American Ethnology. Washington. 8°. 39 pp. 1907. (10) Circular of information regarding Indian popular names. 8°. 8 pp. [1915.] (Revised edition October 1926.) (11) [Map of ] Linguistic families of American Indians north of Mexico, by J. W. Powell. Revised by members of the staff of the Bureau of American Ethnology. 1915. (Revised edition 1926.) (12) List of publications of the Bureau of American Ethnology, with index to authors and titles. Revised to June 30, 1944. 68 pp. 1944. (13) List of publications of the Bureau of American Ethnology, with index to authors and titles. Revised to June 30, 1949. 101 pp. 1949. INDEX TO AUTHORS AND TITLES * A=Annual Report. B=Bulletin. C =Contributions to North American Ethnology. I =Introduction M = Miscellaneous Publications. P=Publications of the Institute of Social Anthropology. Aboriginal culture of the Southeast (Swanton)__________- A 42, 673. Aboriginal fish poisons (Heizer).----..-.-.s22524-4L22 B- 151, Anthrop. Pap. No. 38. Aboriginal house mounds (Fowke)-_________-_---__-_---- B 76, 161. Aboriginal navigation off the coasts of Upper and Baja B_ 151, Anthrop. Pap. California (Heizer and Massey). No. 39. Aboriginal sociopolitical groups, Basin-plateau (Steward). B 120. A B Aborigines of Porto Rico and neighboring islands (Fewkes) PA Bh. Achagua and their neighbors, The (Herndndez de Alba) -- 143, vol. 4, pp. 399- 412. Ackerknecht, Erwin H. Medical practices._______ ______ B 143, vol. 5. Acoma, New material from (White)________------------ B_ 136, Anthrop. Pap. No. 32. Acoma and other records, Origin myth of (Stirling) -___-_- B 135. Acoma Indians, The (White)__-- 2. --..-202-u22LL esl sL At PAT, ite Aconite poison whaling in Asia and America (Heizer)---_ B 133, Anthrop. Pap. No. 24. Activital similarities (Powell)______.____________-__-_-- AGT SFLX Ve Activities. See Esthetology; Philology; Sociology; So- phiology; Technology. Addicks dam site, The: I. An archeological survey of the Addicks Dam B_ 154, 143-252. Basin, southeast Texas (Wheat). II. Indian skeletal remains from the Doering and B_ 154, 253-266. Kobs sites, Addicks Reservoir, Texas (New- man). Additional studies of the arts, crafts, and customs of the B_ $1. Guiana Indians, with special reference to those of south- ern British Guiana (Roth). Alabama: Archeological survey of Pickwick Basin in (Webb and B_ 129. DeJarnette). northern, An archeological survey of Wheeler Basin B_ 122. in (Webb). Pickwick Basin, geology of (Jones)__...------------ B 129, 327. Pickwick Basin, skeletal material from (Newman and B_ 129, 393. Snow). Alsealnt heir): SS eros. Wet Peek B 148, vol. 1, pp. 55- 79. Alaska: Anthropological survey in (Hrdli¢éka)____._________- A 46, 19. Notes on the natives of (Furuhelm)_____________- Jimi Covilga las § Do not make selections from this index, but from the list. The index does not show the numbers ‘out of print.” 43 44 Algonquian, Siouan, and Caddoan tribes west of the Mississippi, Burials of the (Bushnell). Algonquian, Siouan, and Caddoan tribes west of the Mississippi, Villages of the (Bushnell). Algonquian languages, Bibliography of the (Pilling) -____- Algonquian tribes, Preliminary report on the linguistic classification of (Michelson). See also Bulletin 40 (pt. 1). Algonquin, River Desert, Art processes in birchbark of the (Speck). Alphonse, Ephraim S. Guaymi grammar_-__-_----------- In press. Alsea texts and myths (Frachtenberg) ------------------ Amanayé, The (Nimuendaji and Métraux)----.-------- Amanf, The Patdngoro and (Kirchhoff) ____..----------- Amazon, Little-known tribes of the lower (Nimuendaji) -- Amazon Basin, The archeology of the (Meggers) --------- Amazon River, Tribes of the middle and upper (Métraux) - Amulets, cranial, Prehistoric trephining and (R. Fletcher) - Analytical and critical bibliography of the tribes of Tierra del Fuego and adjacent territory (Cooper). Andean area Indians, anthropometric relations with Quichua-speaking Indians of Province of Imbabura (Ecuador). Andean calendar, The (Vale4rcel)_--.-.-.-------------- Andean culture, The northeastern extension (Métraux and Kirchhoff). Andean Highlands, The: An introduction (Bennett) -____- Andean peoples, The social and political organization of the (Kirchhoff). Animal carvings from mounds of the Mississippi Valley (Henshaw). Animism and folk-lore of the Guiana Indians (Roth) ----- Anthropological needs and possibilities in Central America (Strong and Johnson). Anthropological papers: INOS: 1=0582= 2225-2 2 ee Se oe ee See eee Anthropological survey in Alaska (Hrdli¢ka)_._..-_----- Anthropologic data, Limitations to the use of some (Powell). B B mw acli@= it BUREAU OF AMERICAN ETHNOLOGY 83. 77. 13. 28, 221. 128, Anthrop. Pap. No. 17. 162. 67. 143, vol. 3, pp. 199- 202. 143, vol. 4, pp. 339- 348. 143, vol. 3, pp. 209- DA te 143, vol. 3, pp. 149- 166. 143, vol. 3, pp. 687- 712, Ss 63. 128, Anthrop. Pap. No. 16. 143, vol. 2, pp. 471- 476. 143, vol. 4, pp. 349- 369. 143, vol. 2, pp. 1-60. 143, vol. 5, pp. 293- 311. 2 ALF. 30, 103. 143, vol. 4, pp. 293- 296. 119. 123. 128. 133. 136. 151. 157. 164. 46, 19. 1, 71. INDEX TO AUTHORS AND TITLES Anthropometry of South American Indians (Steggerda) __ Anthropometry of South American Indian skeletal remains (Stewart and Newman). Anthropometry of the Indians of Brazil, The (Bastos d’ Avila). Anthropometry of the Indians of Chile, The (Henckel)___ Antiquities: Certain, of eastern Mexico (Fewkes) ___-__-_____---- Handbook of American (Holmes) --------_-_------- Mexican and Central American, calendar systems, history and (Seler and others). of central and southeastern Missouri (Fowke)_______ of region between Mancos and La Plata Rivers in southwestern Colorado (Morris) of the Jemez Plateau, New Mexico (Hewett) _-___--_- of the Mesa Verde National Park Cliff Palace (Fewkes) of the Mesa Verde National Park Spruce-tree House (Fewkes). of the upper Gila and Salt River valleys in Arizona and New Mexico (Hough). of the upper Verde and Walnut Creek valleys, Arizona (Fewkes). Antiquity of man in South America, The (McCown) -- -- Apache, The medicine-men of the (Bourke)____________- Aparicio, Francisco de: The archeology of the Parand River_____-_____-_-_- DBheiComenching6ns_s9..2s 2. te ee ee Apiac4é, The Cayabi, Tapanyuna, and (Nimuendaji) -___-- Arapaho, northern, flat pipe and the ceremony of covering the pipe (Carter). Arapaho child life and its cultural background (Hilger) __- Arapium, The Maué and (Nimuendajii)_________--_---- ATAcnMiaRsd ine: (Cooper)... ==. -2-aseo-e55-5 Araucanians in Argentina, The expansion of the (Canals Frau). Arauquin, Archeology of (Petrullo)___.___-_________--__-- Apne oT MECOROLISO) = A Sf at Archeological expedition to Arizona in 1895 (Fewkes) -__- Archeological explorations at Macon, Ga., A preliminary report on (Kelly). Archeological explorations in northeastern Arizona (Kidder and Guernsey). Archeological investigations (Fowke)_______-_______-_-- Archeological investigations—II (Fowke).____.-___-___-- Res. soo Bee! a eee Paes stor} cel loo} jo9) 45 143, vol. 6, pp. 57- 69. 143, vol. 6, pp. 19- 42. 143, vol. 6, pp. 71- 84. 143, vol. 6, pp. 121- 135. 25, 221. 60. 28. 37. 33, 155. 32. 51. 41. 35. 28, 181. 143, vol. 6, pp. 1-9. 9, 443. 143, vol. 3, pp. 57- 67. 143, vol. 2, pp. 673- 685. 143, vol. 3, pp. 307- 320. 119, Anthrop. Pap. No. 2. 148. 143, vol. 3, pp. 245- 254. 143, vol. 2, pp. 687- 760. 143, vol. 2, pp. 761- 766. 123, Anthrop. Pap. . No. 12. 143, vol. 4, pp. 507- 546. 17, 519. 119, Anthrop. Pap. No. 1. 65. 76. 44, 399. 46 Archeological investigations at Buena Vista Lake, Cali- fornia (Wedel). Archeological investigations at the mouth of the Amazon (Meggers and Evans). Jn press. Archeological investigations in the Corozal District of British Honduras (T. and M. Gann). Archeological investigations in the Oahe Dam area, South Dakota, 1950-51 (Lehmer). Archeological materials from the vicinity of Mobridge, South Dakota (Wedel). Archeological observations north of the Rio Colorado (Judd). Archeological reconnaissance of southern Utah (Steward) - Archeological reconnaissance of Tabasco and Campeche (Stirling). In press. Archeological remains in the Whitewater District, eastern Arizona. Part I: House types (Roberts). Archeological remains in the Whitewater District, eastern Arizona. Part II: Artifacts and burials (Roberts). Archeological survey of Pickwick Basin in the adjacent portions of the States of Alabama, Mississippi, and Tennessee (Webb and DeJarnette). Archeological survey of the Addicks Dam Basin, southeast Texas (Wheat). Archeological survey of the Norris Basin in eastern Ten- nessee, An (Webb). Archeological survey of Wheeler Basin on the Tennessee River in northern Alabama, An (Webb). Archeological survey on the northern Northwest Coast (Drucker). Archeological work in Hawaii (Fowke)___-___-__________- Archeologic investigations in James and Potomac Valleys (Fowke). AE CHEOLOR Ys CUZCO! (VALCARCE) sss e so) = ee nee Archeology, Pawnee, An introduction to (Wedel)_______- Archeology of Arauquin (Petrullo)______________._____- Archeology of Central America, The: An introduction (Strong). Archeology of Colombia, The (Bennett)_______________- Archeology of Costa Rica and Nicaragua, The (Strong) ___- Archeology of Ecuador, The (Collier)___._-____________- Archeology of Honduras, The (Strong) Archeology of Panamd, The (Lothrop) Archeology of Patagonia, The (Bird) __- we ee Neel selec! Seel tes = foci les} tes} eof les) Cp Ge Co eg BUREAU OF AMERICAN ETHNOLOGY 130. 167. 123, Anthrop. Pap. No, 7. 158. 157, Anthrop. Pap. No. 45. 82. 128, Anthrop. Pap. No. 18. 164, Anthrop. Pap. No. 53. 121. 126. 129. 154, 143-252. 118. 122. 133, Anthrop. Pap. No. 20. 76, 174. 23. 143, vol. 2, pp. 177- 182. 112. 123, Anthrop. Pap. No. 12. 143, vol. 4, pp. 69- 70. 143, vol. 2, pp. 823- 850. 143, vol. 4, pp. 121- 142. 143, vol. 2, pp. 767- 784. 143, vol. 4, pp. 71- 120. 143, vol. 4, pp. 143- 167. 143, vol. 1, pp. 17- 24. INDEX TO AUTHORS AND TITLES Archeology of San Augustin and Tierradentro, Colombia, The (Herndndez de Alba). Archeology of the Amazon Basin, The (Meggers)-________- Archeology of the Central Andes, The (Bennett)_________ Archeology of the Greater Pampa, The (Willey)_..______ Archeology of the Parand River, The (Aparicio) ________- Archeology of the Popaydn region, Colombia, The (Leh- mann). Archeology of Venezuela, The (Kidder)____-.___________ Architecture, A study of Pueblo Tusayan and Cibola (V. Mindeleff). Argentina, Cephalic deformations of the Indians in (Imbelloni). Argentina, The Diaguita of (M4rquez Miranda)_____-_-___ Argentina, The present status of the theories concerning primitive man in (Frenguelli). Arizona: Aboriginal remains in Verde Valley in (C. Mindeleff) Antiquities of the upper Gila and Salt River Valleys (Hough). Archeological explorations in northeastern (Kidder and Guernsey). eastern, Archeological remains in the Whitewater District. Part I: House types (Roberts). eastern, Archeological remains in the Whitewater District. Part II: Artifacts and burials (Roberts). eastern, Skeletal remains from the Whitewater District (Stewart). eastern, The ruins at Kiatuthlanna (Roberts). _______ Flagstaff, A survey of prehistoric sites in the region of (Colton). Illustrated catalogue of collections from, in 1879 (J. Stevenson). Illustrated catalogue of collections from, in 1881 (J. Stevenson). Navaho National Monument, visit to (Fewkes)______ The cliff-ruins of Canyon de Chelly in (C. Mindeleff). See also Casa Grande; Tusayan. Armstrong, John M., and Métraux, Alfred. The Goajiro_ Art: Ancient, of the province of Chiriqui, Colombia (Holmes). ceramic, Form and ornament in (Holmes)___________ in shell, of the ancient Americans (Holmes)_________ Uiiroehen\ee. 26 2 4 =e oa eh eh a B 47 143, vol. 2, pp. 851- 859. 143, vol. 3, pp. 149- 166. 143, vol. 2, pp. 61- 147. 143, vol. 1, pp. 25- 46. 143, vol. 3, pp. 57- 67. 143, vol. 864. 143, vol. 438. 8, 3. 2, pp. 861- 4, pp. 413- 143, vol. 6, pp. 53- 55. 143, vol. 654. 143, vol. 6, pp. 1l- 17, 2, pp. 637- 13, 179. 35. 65. 121. 126. 126, 153. 100. 104. 2, 307. 3, 511, 50. 16, 73. 143, vol. 4, pp. 369- 383. 6, 3. 4, 437. 2, 179. 143, vol. 5, pp. 411- 492. 48 BUREAU OF AMERICAN ETHNOLOGY Art—Continued Prehistoric textile, of eastern United States (Holmes) - processes in birchbark of the River Desert Algonquin, a circumboreal trait (Speck). Stone (Powkey. 22005 2 8 - sek ES PS eee textile, A*study of the (Holmes) 22 --..-......-._-_- Artifacts and burials, Whitewater District, eastern Arizona (Roberts). Artists, native, Hopi katcinas drawn by (Fewkes)__--_-_- Arts, crafts, and customs of the Guiana Indians, Additional studies of the (Roth). Arts, crafts, and customs of the Guiana Indians, Intro- ductory study of the (Roth). Arua, The Turiwara and (Nimuendaj)-_---------------- Atacamenon Duer(bennett)... 20>. 5 asco ee Atakapa language, accompanied by text material, A dic- tionary of the (Gatschet and Swanton). See also Bulletin 68. Athapascan languages, Bibliography of the (Pilling) --_-_- See also Bulletin 40 (pt. 1). Autobiography of a Fox Indian woman (Michelson) _---_- Aymara; ihe *(Gschopik) Sse Se ee eee Baldus, Herbert. See Métraux, Alfred, and Baldus, Herbert. Ball, Sydney H. The mining of gems and ornamental stones by American Indians. Barlc cloth (Métraux) 4... Tenia ve _ Se A ere _S Basal metabolic rates of South American Indians, The (Wilson). Basin-plateau aboriginal sociopolitical groups (Steward) -- Basket Maker site in the Chaco Canyon, New Mexico, Shabik’eshchee village, a late (Roberts). Basketry (OO Neale) 2) ae ee ees Basketry, Coiled, in British Columbia and surrounding region (Haeberlin, Teit, and Roberts). Bastos d’Avila, José. The anthropology of the Indians of Brazil. Beals, Ralph L.: Cher4n: a Sierra Tarascan village------------------ Contemporary culture of the Cahita Indians, The-_-- and Carrasco, Pedro, and McCorkle, Thomas. Houses and house use of the Sierra Tarascans. Beckwith, Martha Warren. The Hawaiian Romance of Laieikawai. Belaieff, Juan. The present-day Indians of the Gran Chaco. vole OS = Se a 13, 3. 128, Anthrop. Pap. No. 17. 13, 47. 6, 189. 126. 21, 3. 91. 38, 25. 143, vol. 3, pp. 193- 198. 143, vol. 2, pp. 599- 618. 108. 14. 40, 291. 143, vol. 2, pp. 501- 573. 128, Anthrop. Pap. No. 13. 143, vol. 5, pp. 67- 68. 143, vol. 6, pp. 97- 104. 120. 92. 143, vol. 5, pp. 6°- 96. 41, 119. 143, vol. 6, pp. 71- 84. 33, 285. 143, vol. 1, pp. 371- 380. INDEX TO AUTHORS AND TITLES 49 Belief of the Indian in a connection between song and the B_- 151, Anthrop. Pap. supernatural, The (Densmore). No. 37. Benedict, Ruth. Tales of the Cochiti Indians___________ Bags: Bennett, Wendell C.: ODS EDT That al erties eens Sa aepentnn Sepp seeeins B_ 143, vol. 5, pp. 53- 65. Pinon tightees) Maen nek ae. oo oS Soe B_ 148, vol. 5, pp. 1-20. LE VCSPrSTEL AAT e DEY Ge) 01 eg en lg B_ 143, vol. 5, pp. 21- Zi. Mnemonic and recording devices___---------------- B_ 143, vol. 5, pp. 611— 619. Numbers, measures, weights, and calendars_________ Bs 143, vol. 5, pp. 601- 610. RehpionNscractures =. 2 - Bec e: d ett B_ 143, vol. 5, pp. 29— 51. The Andean Highlands: An introduction______-_-__-~- B_ 148, vol. 2, pp. 1-60. he arceeolary. of (Colombia...-.------=' =--------- B_ 143, vol. 2, pp. 823- 850. The archeology of the Central Andes__-__-_--------- B_ 148, vol. 2, pp. 61- 147. Bite aCe Orne 8 eet een a fe a Bs 148, vol. 2, pp. 599— 618. Bering Strait, The Eskimo about (Nelson)_____________- AS Ss 3: Betoi and their neighbors, The (Hernandez de Alba)-_-____ B_ 143, vol. 4, pp. 393— 398. Bibliography: of the Algonquian languages (Pilling)_____________-_- BT 13: of the Athapascan languages (Pilling) _____________- B14, of the Chinookan languages (including the Chinook B15. jargon) (Pilling). of the Eskimo language (Pilling)____.______-.--_--- Bil: of the Iroquoian languages (Pilling)___-____________- B 6. of the languages of the North American ae Mae 2: Proof sheets of (Pilling). of the Muskhogean languages (Pilling)_______-_____- Be os of the Salishan languages (Pilling)___________--___- B16. of the Siouan languages (Pilling)___.________---__-- 1B ME of the tribes of Tierra del Fuego (Cooper)_________-- BY 63: of the Wakashan languages (Pilling)_______________- Boe 19: Biloxi-Ofo dictionary (Dorsey and Swanton)___________- BY 47: Birchbark, Art processes in, of the River Desert Algonquin B 128, Anthrop. Pap.. (Speck). No. 17. Bird, Junius B.: Miteraegenlaee: Fey. SP Woe Se ee ne a B_ 148, vol. 1, pp. 55- 79. Dherarcheology of Patagonigs-.u..- 22 2-- =" _* B 148, vol. 1, pp. 17- 24. The cultural sequence of the North Chilean Coast_-- B 148, vol. 2, pp. 587- 594. The historic inhabitants of the North Chilean Coast__ B 143, vol. 2, pp. 595- 597. Blood groups of South American Indians (Boyd) -____-__- ~ B 148, vol. 6, pp. 9!- 95. 50 Blood revenge, war, and victory feasts among the Jibaro Indians of eastern Ecuador (Karsten). Boas, Franz: Chinookstexts-2. 2 4o.= 3645522 ceases toe sees aces Ethnology of the Kwakiutl Indians (based on notes by George Hunt). Kathlametitexts=- 3. ste Se os ee ‘he woentralrskimo.. - 222205245 eee ee ces TUSN TAS ONT AY TONKA AYO) Koy eS .. JS ase sims hlanutexte2 see 352 28 ee ee eS and Chamberlain, Alexander Francis. Kutenai tales_ editor. Handbook of American Indian languages-__- See also Haeberlin, H. K., Teit, James A., and Roberts, Helen H.; Teit, James A. Bogoras, Waldemar. See Bulletin 40 (pt. 2). Bolivia, eastern, Native tribes of (Métraux)____________- Bolivia and the Madeira headwaters, Tribes of eastern (Métraux). Bolivian Andes, Tribes of the eastern slopes of the (Métraux). Bonnerjea, Biren. General index, annual reports of the Bureau of American Ethnology, vols. 1 to 48. Bororo,."The (Uowse) ss oe 2p Sle oe ee Botocudo: “Bhe (Métraux) = 2-228 oe a eee Bourke, John G. The medicine-men of the Apache_____- Bowditch, Charles P. [Papers translated under the super- vision of J. Boyd, William C. Blood groups of South American Indians. , Brand, Donald D. Quiroga: a Mexican municipio-____-_-_ Brazil, Eastern: An introduction (Lowie) ------_-------- Brazil, The anthropometry of the Indians of (Bastos d’ Avila). Brinton, Daniel G. The graphic system and ancient methods of the Mayas. British Columbia, Music of Indians of (Densmore) -___---- British Columbia and surrounding region, Coiled basketry in (Haeberlin, Teit, and Roberts). See also Thompson Indians. British Columbia coast, Early vertebrate fauna of (Fisher) - British Guiana. See Roth, Walter E. British Honduras, Archeological investigations in the Corozal District of (T. and M. Gann). British Honduras, northern, Maya Indians of (Gann) --_-- British Honduras, Report on two skulls from. Jn Anthrop. Pap. No. 7, Bulletin 123. Buena Vista Lake, California, Archeological investigations at (Wedel). B BUREAU OF AMERICAN ETHNOLOGY 79. 20. 35, 42. 26. 6, 399. 31, 29. 27. 59. 40. 134. 143, vol. 3, pp. 381- 454, 143, vol. 3, pp. 465- 506. 48, 25. 143, vol. 1, pp. 419- 434. 143, vol. 1, pp. 531- 540. 9, 443. 28. 143, vol. 6, pp. 91- 95. 11. 143, vol. 1, pp. 381- 397. 143, vol. 6, pp. 71- 84. 5 (pt. 3), xvii. 136, Anthrop. No. 27. 41, 119. Pap. 133, Anthrop. No. 20, 133. Pap. 123, Anthrop. No: 7, 64. Pap. 130. INDEX TO AUTHORS AND TITLES Buena Vista sites, California, Skeletal remains from (Stewart). Bulkley River, The Carrier Indians of the (Jenness) - -- -- Bunzel, Ruth L.: Introduction to Zufii ceremonialism______________-- Zufi katcinas: An analytical study_______________-- PTET) Aree Tn yb See ee ae ae Se ZU TI GU AlE Oe by see ae nee et Seer Ra Burial, Native cemeteries and forms of, east of the Missis- sippi (Bushnell). Burials, Artifacts and, Whitewater District, Arizona (Roberts). Burials of the Algonquian, Siouan, and Caddoan tribes west of the Mississippi (Bushnell). Burton Mound at Santa Barbara, California, Exploration of the (Harrington). Bushnell, David I., Jr.: Burials of the Algonquian, Siouan, and Caddoan tribes west of the Mississippi. Choctaw of Bayou Lacomb, Louisiana_________---__- Native cemeteries and forms of burial east of the Mississippi. Native villages and village sites east of the Mississippi_ Villages of the Algonquian, Siouan, and Caddoan tribes west of the Mississippi. Butchering techniques at the Dodd and Phillips Ranch sites (White). Byington, Cyrus. A dictionary of the Choctaw language (Swanton and Halbert, editors). eastern Caddoan tribes: west of the Mississippi, Burials of the Algonquian, Siouan, and (Bushnell). west of the Mississippi, Villages of the Algonquian, Siouan, and (Bushnell). Caddo Indians, Source material on the history and eth- nology of the (Swanton). Céhita Indians, The contemporary culture of the (Beals) _- @ampangrlnes (Metra) Sees. ee ee Caldwell, Joseph R. The Elbert County, Georgia. Calendar, The Andean (Valcdrcel)__._.______--___---.-- Rembert mounds, Calendar history of the Kiowa Indians (Mooney) _------- Calendar systems: Misawyaine (nin Gis) eee os See ee Mayan antiquities, history, and. See Bulletin 28. Mexican and Central American (Seler and others) __- Calendars, Numbers, measures, weights and (Bennett) ___ B B > Dw WD WPpPppp mW St Shae Wit oh ww ol 130, 172. 133, Anthrop. Pap. No. 25. 47, 467. 47, 837. 47, 545. 47, 611. 71. 126. 83. 44, 23. 83. 48. 71. 69. 77. 158, 165. 46. 83. 77. 132. 142. 143, vol. 1, pp. 445- 475. 154, 303-320. 143, vol. 2, pp. 471-— 476. 17, 129: 19, 693, and 22 (pt. 1), 197. 28. 143, vol. 5, pp. 601- 610. 02 BUREAU OF AMERICAN ETHNOLOGY California: Archeological investigations at Buena Vista Lake, Kern County (Wedel). Buena Vista sites, Skeletal remains from (Stewart) -- Handbook of Indians of (Kroeber)___-___-____-__---__- Perforated stones from (Henshaw)-__--__-_--_-_____- Tribestots (Rh GWers)=-2 2 sac aneseee eee ee see ee See also Harrington, John P. Camacan linguistic family, The (Métraux and Nimuen- daji). Canals Frau, Salvador: The expansion of the Araucanians in Argentina_-___- ‘Phephiuanpe <5 eee See ae oe ee ee Cannibalism, and human trophies, Warfare (Métraux) - -- Capron, Louis. The medicine bundles of the Florida Sem- inole and the Green Corn Dance. Carajanpbhex(@hLipkimd) =: --- eee eee ees Caribs/fhe (Rouse) *eee 3 O52 S8e oe oe See se Caribbean Lowland tribes, The: The Mosquito, Sumo, Paya, and Jicaque (Kirchhoff). Caribbean Lowland tribes, The: The Talamanca Division (Johnson). Caribs of Dominies; The! (laylor)=- 2-2-2222 te eet Carini: Thex@owie)=.o2632_ sass sa ee ee Carrasco, Pedro, Beals, Ralph L., and McCorkle, Thomas. Houses and house use of the Sierra Tarascans. Carrier Indians of the Bulkley River (Jenness) -_-_---_-- Carter, John G. The northern Arapaho flat pipe and the ceremony of covering the pipe. Carvings, Animal, from mounds of the Mississippi Valley (Henshaw). Casa Grande, Arizona, (Fewkes) ---.----..------=-----. Casa Grandeiruin’ (©; Mindelefi) = 2 2_ = 2 eee The repair of, in 1891 (C. Mindeleff)_........---.---- Casanova, Eduardo. The cultures of the Puna and the Quebrada de Humahuaca. Castro Pozo, Hildebrando. Social and economico-political evolution of the communities of Central Pert. Catalogue: Illustrated, of collections from New Mexico and Arizona in 1879 (J. Stevenson). Illustrated, of collections from New Mexico in 1880 (J. Stevenson). Illustrated, of collections from pueblos in 1881 (J. Stevenson). 130. 130, 172. 78. 2. 3. 143, vol. 1, pp. 552. 143, vol. 2, pp. 766. 143, vol. 1, pp. 175. 143, vol. 5, pp. 409. 151, Anthrop. No. 35. 143, vol. 3, pp. noe 143, vol. 4, pp. 565. 143, vol. 4, pp. 229. 143, vol. 4, pp. 251. 119, Anthrop. No. 3. 143, vol. 1, pp. 559. 1. 133, Anthrop. No. 25. 119, Anthrop. No. 2. PM fe 28, 25. 13, 289. 15, 315. 143, vol. 2, pp. 631. 143, vol. 2, pp. 499. 2, 307. 2, 423. 3, 511. 547- 761- 169- 383- Pap. 179- 547- 219- 231- Pap. 557- Pap. Pap. 619- 483- INDEX TO AUTHORS AND TITLES 53 Catalogue—Continued Illustrated, of collections made in 1881 (Holmes)__-__ A _ 3, 427. of linguistic manuscripts in the library of the Bureau A_ 1, 553. of Ethnology (Pilling). of prehistoric works east of the Rocky Mountains B_ 12. (Thomas). Cauca Valley, Sub-Andean tribes of the (Herndndez de B_ 143, vol. 4, pp. 297- Alba). 327. Cave, A. J. E. Report on two skulls from British Hon- duras. Jn Anthrop. Pap. No. 7, Bulletin 123. Cave explorations in other States (Fowke)______________ B_ 76, 101. Cave explorations in the Ozark region of Central Missouri B_ 76, 13. (Fowke). Caves, Ancient, of the Great Salt Lake region (Steward)__ B_ 116. Cawahib, Parintintin, and their neighbors, The (Nimu- B_ 143, vol. 3, pp. 283- endajti). 297. Cayabf, Tapanyuna, and Apiac4, The (Nimuendajti) _____ Bs 143, vol. 3, pp. 307- 320. Cavan and Colorado:. The (Murra) << - B_ 148, vol. 4, pp. 277- 291. Cayano. Thersouthern (Lowie)---"-_--_____-*_*__-_._ = B_ 143, vol. 1, pp. 519- 520. Gegiha language, The (Dorsey)-_----------------_---_-- C 6. Cemeteries, Native, and forms of burial east of the Missis- B 71. sippi (Bushnell). See also Burials. Central America: Anthropological needs and possibilities in (Strong and B_ 143, vol. 4, pp. 293- Johnson). 296. Cultivated plants of South and (Sauer)____________- B_ 148, vol. 6, pp. 319- 344. Indian languages of Mexico and (Thomas and B 44. Swanton). Numeral systems of Mexico and (Thomas)__________ AK 195,853: The archeology of: An introduction (Strong)________ B_ 148, vol. 4, pp. 69- 70. Thebasic:cultures of (Stone)_--~--...5--__— = B 148, vol. 4, pp. 169- 193. The post-Conquest ethnology of: An introduction B_ 143, vol. 4, pp. 195- (Johnson). 198. See also British Honduras; Yucatan. Central American, and Mexican, antiquities, calendar B_ 28. systems, and history (Seler and others). Central American Cultures: An introduction (Johnson). B 148, vol. 4, pp. 43- 68. Central American picture-writing, Studies in (Holden)____ A 1, 205. Central Andes, The archeology of the (Bennett)_________ B 148, vol. 2, pp. 61- 147. Central Pert, Social and economico-political evolution of B 143, vol. 2, pp. 483- the communities of (Castro Pozo). 499. Cephalic deformations of the Indians in Argentina B_ 143, vol. 6, pp. 53- (Imbelloni). 55. 54 Ceramic remains from two sites near Beaufort, South Carolina (Griffin). Ceramic sequences at Tres Zapotes, Veracruz, Mexico (Drucker). Ceramic stratigraphy at Cerro de las Mesas, Veracruz, Mexico (Drucker). Ceramic study of Virginia archeology, A (Evans)-------- Ceramicsa (Willey) tats fetes BPs eee eee ee Ceramics of Tres Zapotes, Veracruz, Mexico, An intro- duction to the (Weiant). Ceremonialism, Zufi, Introduction to (Bunzel)-_-_------- Ceremonial life of the Choctaw Indians, Source material for the social and (Swanton). Ceremonial of Hasjelti Dailjis and mythical sand painting of the Navajo (J. Stevenson). Ceremonies, Tonawanda longhouse, ninety years after Lewis Henry Morgan (Fenton). Ceremonies, Tusayan snake (Fewkes)_.-..------------- Ceremony, The Hako: A Pawnee (A. C. Fletcher) _------- Ceremony, War, and peace ceremony (La Flesche) ----- -- Ceremony of covering the northern Arapaho flat pipe (Carter). Cerro de las Mesas, Mexico, ceramic stratigraphy (Drucker) Cerro de las Mesas offering of jade and other materials, The (Drucker). Cessions, Indian land, in the United States (Royce and Thomas). Cessions of land by Indian tribes to the United States (Royce). Chaco, Ethnography of the (Métraux)-_..-_------------- Chaco Canyon. See Roberts, Frank H. H., Jr. Chaco-Santiaguefio culture, The (Mdrquez Miranda) ----- Chama Valley, New Mexico, Excavation in the (Jencon) --- Chamberlain, Alexander Francis, and Boas, Franz, Kutenai tales. Charruaasaihie: (Serrano) sa- . t e a o Cher4n: a Sierra Tarascan village__________------------ Cherokee, Myths of the (Mooney)--------------------- Cherokee, The sacred formulas of the (Mooney) ------- -- Cherokee nation of Indians, The (Royce) _---_-_--------- Cherokee sacred formulas and medicinal prescriptions, The Swimmer manuscript: (Mooney and Olbrechts). Cherokees, The Eastern (Gilbert)....___-_------------- ChibchaThe (Kroger): S@aeemen 22 Chicasaw Indians, Social and religious beliefs and usages of the (Swanton). B > - BH WWrpr BUREAU OF AMERICAN ETHNOLOGY 133, Anthrop. No. 22. 140. 141. 160. 143, vol. 5, pp. 204. 139. 47, 467. 103. 8, 229. 128, Anthrop. No. 15. 16, 267. 22 (pt. 2), 5. 101. 119, Anthrop. No. 21. 141. 157, 25-68. 18, 521. 1, 247. 143, vol. 1, pp. 370. 143, vol. 2, pp. 660. 81. 59. 143, vol. 1, pp. 196. 2. 19, 3. 7, 301. 5, 121. 99. 133, Anthrop. No. 23. 143, vol. 2, pp. 909. 44, 169. Pap. 139- Pap. Pap. 197- 655- 191— Pap. 887- INDEX TO AUTHORS AND TITLES Children’s stories, with texts and songs, Picuris (Har- rington). Chile: ihe Puaguia of (uethrop)-_...-------.-=-,----. =~ The geographical pathology of (Herzog)___________- The Indians of, The anthropometry of the (Henckel)-_ The races of, The physical anthropology of the internal organs among (Henckel). Chinookan languages (including the Chinook jargon), Bibliography of the (Pilling). See also Bulletin 40 (pt. 1). SUHOMCTERIS UIG8S)) = 022 so ee ee Chippewa child life and its cultural background (Hilger) _- Chippewa customs (Densmore)_._._.-.--.------_------ Chippewa Indians, Uses of plants by the (Densmore) _ __- Chippewa music (Densmore)... --_. 2-2. -5- =... 2 Chippewa music—II (Densmore)_________________----- See also Ojibwa. Chiriqui, Colombia, Ancient art of the province of (Holmes) Chiriqui, Isthmus of Darien, The use of gold and other metals among the ancient inhabitants of (Holmes). Chitimacha Indians in Louisiana, A search for songs among the (Densmore). Chitimacha language. See Bulletin 68. HOCH UNE (SU0UG) 26 2 2. eee eae ees ce wee Choctaw Indians, Source material for the social and cere- monial life of the (Swanton). Choctaw language, A dictionary of the (Byington; Swanton and Halbert, editors). Chactaw music CMeMsMmore). se Choctaw of Bayou Lacomb, Louisiana (Bushnell)________ RRO MEL IGG CUMATICL) = 2 se isa cg Se Chukchee (Bogoras). See Bulletin 40 (pt. 2). Cibola architecture (V. Mindeleff)____________________- See also Zuni. RabOney, Der RONG) 42 eee ge Ciboney, The ethnology of the (Garcfa Valdés)_________- Ciguayo. The ethnography of Hispaniola______________ Circum-Caribbean tribes, The: An introduction (Steward) _ Clans, Tusayan, Localization of (C. Mindeleff)__________ Cliff Palace, Mesa Verde National Park [Colorado ]_____- (Fewkes). Cliff ruins of Canyon de Chelly, Arizona (C. Mindeleff) __ Coaiquer, The modern Quillacinga, Pasto and (Ortiz) ___- A Dre Brow 55 43, 289. 143, vol. 2, pp. 633- 636. 143, vol. 6, pp. 137- 144, 143, vol. 6, pp. 121- 135. 143, vol. 6, pp. 145- 156. 15. 133, Anthrop. Pap. No. 19. 143, vol. 4, pp. 269- 276. 103. 46. 136, Anthrop. Pap. No. 28. 48. 143, vol. 1, pp. 47- 54. 8, 3. 143, vol. 4, pp. 497- 503. 143, vol. 4, pp. 503- 505. 143, vol. 4, p. 539. 143, vol. 4, pp. 1-41. 19, 635. 51. 16, 73. 143, vol. 2, pp. 961- 968. 56 Cochiti Indians, Tales of the (Benedict)______________-- ‘Coconuco, The Moguex- (Lehmann)______-_______-___-- Codices, Maya, Aids to the study of the (Thomas) ______- Coiled basketry in British Columbia and surrounding region (Haeberlin, Teit, and Roberts). Collections: Illustrated catalogue of, from New Mexico and Arizona in 1879 (J. Stevenson). from New Mexico in 1880 (J. Stevenson)___________ from pueblos in 1881 (J. Stevenson)________________ madeinwl/ Sse (Holmes) Hasse) 4s eee ee eee, Collier, Donald. The archeology of Ecuador___________- Colombia: The archeology ,of (Bennett)... -- -- 4 The archeology of San Agustin and Tierrodentro (Hernandez de Alba). The Highland tribes of southern (Hernandez de Alba) - The native tribes and languages of southwestern (Ortiz). Colorado: Antiquities of the Mesa Verde: Cliff Palace (Fewkes) _ ” Antiquities of the Mesa Verde: Spruce-tree House (Fewkes). Antiquities of the region between the Mancos and La Plata Rivers (Morris). Prehistoric villages, castles, and towers of southwestern (Fewkes). See also Roberts, Frank H. H., Jr. Colorado, The Cayapa and (Murra)_____.-------------- Colton, Harold S. A survey of prehistoric sites in the region of Flagstaff, Arizona. Comechingén and their neighbors of the Sierras de Cér- doba, The (Aparicio). Concept of locality and the program of Iroquois research, Introduction: (Fenton). Concepts of land ownership among the Iroquois and their neighbors (Snyderman). Connecticut, Native tribes and dialects of (Speck) _-_-___-- Contributions to Fox ethnology (Michelson) ____________- Contributions to Fox ethnology—II (Michelson) _____-___- Conzemius, Eduard. Ethnographical survey of the Mis- kito and Sumu Indians of Honduras and Nicaragua. Cooper, John M.: Analytical and critical bibliography of the tribes of Tierra del Fuego and adjacent territory. ire mialkings secre wear we See A HP | ee) co ancoe: 7 ate tb BUREAU OF. AMERICAN, ETHNOLOGY 98. 143, vol. 2, pp. 969- 974, 6, 253. 41, 119. 2,.307. 2, 423. 3, 511. 3, 427. 143, vol. 2, pp. 767- 784. 143, vol. 2, pp. 823- 850. 143, vol. 2, pp. 851- 859. 143, vol. 2, pp. 915- 961. 143, vol. 2, pp. 911- 914. 51. 41. 33, 155. 70. 143, vol. 4, pp. 277- 291. 104. 143, vol. 2, pp. 673- 685. 149, 1-12. 149, 13-34. 43, 199. 85. i. 106. 63. 143, vol. 5, pp. 283- 292. INDEX TO AUTHORS AND TITLES 57, Cooper, John M.—Continued Gamonvandwpam bling... -- 4 292 eee Jtiane Ju. B 148, vol. 5, pp. 503- : 524. Stimulants and narcotics.____._......--_........... |B 143, vol..5, pp. 525- : 558. The Araucanians________ Be Se eee een Yon Slee 2 B_1438, vol. 2, pp. 687- 760. LEN Ds 017 000) 2 2 ae as _-- B 143, vol. 1, pp. 47— » Mode CSET 2S eae ---. (B 143; vol. .pp..l07— 125. The Patagonian and Pampean Hunters_____________ B 148, vol. 1, pp. 127- 168. The Southern Hunters: An introduction____________ B 143, vol. 1, pp. 13- 15. 1 Nee) a a a. a, ee ye B 148, vol. 1, pp. 81- 106. irre Chad e ee es oes 3 B_ 1438, vol. 5, pp. 265- 276. Copper artifacts from the McNary site, Oregon, Examina- B_ 166. tion of (appendix 4). Coronado expedition, 1540-1542, The (Winship)________- A 14, 329. Cosmology: lroquoian, (Hewitt)... 2 = ede Steyr AC ere Cosmology, Iroquoian, second part, with introduction and A 43, 449. notes (Hewitt). Costa Rica and Nicaragua, The archeology of (Strong). B 143, vol. 4, pp. 121- 142. Couvsde ne. (Métraux).. 2266 BE Lh ee B_ 143, vol. 5, pp. 369- 374. Cree and Montagnais-Naskapi dialects, Linguistic classic B 123, Anthrop. Pap. fication of (Michelson). No. 8. Creek Confederacy, Social organization and social usages A 42, 23. of the Indians of the (Swanton). Creek Indians and their neighbors, Early history of the B 73. (Swanton). Creek Indians, Notes on the (Hewitt)_-_....._._________ B_ 123, Anthrop. Pap. No. 10. Creek Indians, Religious beliefs and medical practices of A 42, 473. (Swanton). Cruz das Almas: a Brazilian village (Pierson)_....__._.._._ P 12. Culbertson, Thaddeus A. Journal of an expedition to the B 147. Mauvaises Terres and the Upper Missouri in 1850 (edited by John Francis McDermott). Culin, Stewart. Games of the North American Indians__ A 24, 3. Cults, Siouan, A Study of (Dorsey)---____----___-_-_-_- A- Ii, 35l- Cultural and historical geography of southwest Guatemala P 4. (McBryde). Cultural geography of the modern Tarascan area (West)__ P 7. Cultural sequence of the North Chilean Coast, The (Bird). B 143, vol. 2, pp. 587- 594. Culture, Aboriginal, of the Southeast (Swanton)_________ A 42, 673. Culture areas of the Tropical Forests (Steward)__________ Bs 148, vol. 3, pp. 883- 899. 58 Culture sequence for the North Coast of Peri, A (Larco Hoyle). Cultures, Central American: An introduction (Johnson) - - Cultures, South American: An interpretative summary (Steward). Cultures of Central America, The basic (Stone) _-__-_---- Cultures of the Puna and the Quebrada de Humahuaca, The (Casanova). Cuna "The (Stony 2935. SEO oe ecse segues Cup-shaped and other lapidarian sculptures (Rau) ------- Current trends in the Wind River Shoshone Sun Dance (Voget). Curtin, Jeremiah, and Hewitt, J. N. B. Seneca fiction, legends, and myths (edited by J. N. B. Hewitt). Cushing, Frank Hamilton: Pueblo pottery as illustrative of Zufi culture growth_- UNI ELI CHESS ee Nets ee ee eee Cuzco archeology (Valedrcel)_..____-_----------------- Dakota-English dictionary, A (Riggs) ------------------ Dakota grammar, texts, and ethnography (Riggs) See also Siouan. Dall, William H.: On masks, labrets, and certain aboriginal customs- -- Terms of relationship used by the Innuit Tribes of the extreme Northwest and Gibbs, George. extreme Northwest. Dangberg, Grace M., editor. Letters to Jack Wilson, the Paiute Prophet, written between 1908 and 1911. In press. Day symbols of the Maya year (Thomas)_---__- -__-- Deardorff, Merle H. See Fenton, William N., editor. Deformations, Cephalic, of the Indians in Argentina (Imbelloni). Deformity, trephining, and mutilation in South American Indian skeletal remains (Stewart). DeJarnette, David L. See Webb, William S., and De- Jarnette. Delawares, Physical anthropology of the Lenape or (Hrdli¢ka). Denig, Edwin T.: Indian tribes of the Upper Missouri (edited by J. N. B. Hewitt). Of the Crow Nation (edited by John C. Ewers) Vocabularies of tribes of the B B BUREAU OF AMERICAN ETHNOLOGY 143, vol. 2, pp. 149- 175. 143, vol. 4, pp. 43- 68. 143, vol. 5, pp. 669- 772. 143, vol. 4, pp. 169- 193. 143, vol. 2, pp. 619- 631. 143, vol. 4, pp. 257- 268. 5. 151, Anthrop. Pap. No. 42. 32, 37. 13, 321. 4, 467. 2, 3. 143, vol. 2, pp. 177- 182. 3, 67. LPAT?: 1, 1. 1, 121. 164, Anthrop. Pap No. 55. 16, 199. 143, vol. 6, 53-55. 143, vol. 6, 48-48. 62. 46, 375. 151, Anthrop. Pap No. 33. INDEX TO AUTHORS AND TITLES Densmore, Frances: A search for songs among the Chitimacha Indians in Louisiana. ° Oe Si i a a s a ae Cripyews WIMIGK 2-7 2 St Ciiopewa weIsiC.—lie ee Choctaw miusiey.. 4... _-_.___- se Seen eer Mandantand Hidatsa music: 22-5. -2 22022222 22 Menominee music. 44. % = 35-0 tt 442 $F Music of Acoma, Isleta, Cochiti, and Zufi Pueblos. In press. Music of the Indians of British Columbia__________-_ Nootka and Quileite music! _—__. 2 Yl2 22. oe. INOGGME MMU GeUmNUS1 Cl ee eel Be oe Papavammusiowe® | Cy - 42M aoe AWMCCHULUSIC Sane = eee Ree arene eta Ne ae ee Peminole musies Ik pressia 32 ep ee Technique in the music of the American Indian______ Me CON: SIOUKSMNUSIC SOE) Be Bed ae ep re HS The belief of the Indian in a connection between song and the supernatural. Uses of plants by the Chippewa Indians____________ Winanand Yaqui music 45. fo... F735 ot Designs on prehistoric Hopi pottery (Fewkes)__________- Diaguita of Argentina, The (Mdrquez Miranda)______ __- Diaguita of Chile, The (Lothrop)_______---__.__-__-__- Dialects, Linguistic classification of Cree and Montagnais- Naskapi (Michelson). Dialects of Connecticut, Native tribes and: A Mohegan- Pequot diary (Speck). Dick, Herbert W. Two rock shelters near Tucumcari, New Mexico. Dictionary: Biloxi-Ofo (Dorsey and Swanton)_________________- Choctaw (Byington; Swanton and Halbert, editors) __ Dakota-English (Riggs)_______- Settee, Bee BO TS Be MipkewAllin (Gibbs) 222. ee fee 2 She NS of American Indians north of Mexico. Advance pages (Hodge). of the Atakapa language (Gatschet and Swanton) __- of the Osage language (La Flesche)__-______.______- Dieseldorff, E. P., and others. Mexican and Central American antiquities, calendar systems, and history. Diné, The: Origin myths of the Navaho Indians (O’ Bryan) Dixon, Roland B. See Bulletin 40 (pt. 1). Dominica, The Caribs of (Taylor)__..___.._-_-_.._____- o9 133, Anthrop.&Pap. No. 19. 86. 45. 53. 136, Anthrop. Pap. No. 28. 80. 102. 165. 136, Anthrop. Pap. No. 27. 124. 75. 90. 93. 161. 151, Anthrop. Pap. No. 36. 61. 151, Anthrop. Pap. No. 37. 44, 275. 110. 33, 207. 143, vol. 2, pp. 637- 654. 143, vol. 2, pp. 633- 636. 123, Anthrop. Pap No. 8. 43, 199. 154, 267-284. 47. 46. 7. 25. 1 (pt. 2), 285. 6. 108. 109. 28. 163. 119, Anthrop. Pap. No. 3. 60 Dorsey, James Owen: Method of recording Indian languages__---_-_--------- Omaha ‘snd Ponks letters: 522 es 22 Ye. Seo ee ae Omaha dwellings, furniture, and implements--- - -- -- Omaha socioldvy =.=... . eta ae ee Osage traditigus: = -i7ee sun eeeeh i ane ee nae ee BIOUAL SOCIOIO I yo) hey. 2 RG SEO eek ste Stud yom mlulan CUlts As 2.27 2 Be ee The ‘Cepiha language. 24 “S228 0s. So. Seep and Swanton, John R. A dictionary of the Biloxi and Ofo languages. editor— A Dakota-English dictionary, by 8. R. Riggs- -- Dakota grammar, texts, and ethnography, by S. R. Riggs. Drucker, Philip: Archeological survey on the northern Northwest Coast Ceramic sequences at Tres Zapotes, Veracruz, Mexico_ Ceramic stratigraphy at Cerro de las Mesas, Veracruz, Mexico. La Venta, Tabasco: a study of Olmec ceramics and art. With a chapter on structural investigations in 1943 (Wedel), and appendix on technological analyses (Shepard). The Cero de las Mesas offering of jade and other materials. The Northern and Central Nootkan tribes___------- Dwellings, furniture, and implements, Omaha (Dorsey) - - See also Houses. Early history of the Creek Indians and their neighbors (Swanton). Early man. See Man, early. Early Pueblo ruins in the Piedra district, southwestern Colorado (Roberts). Earthworks, the circular, square, and octagonal, of Ohio (Thomas). Eastern Indians, Physical anthropology of the (Hrdlicka) - Economics, primitive, A study in American. The wild rice gatherers of the Upper Lakes: (Jenks). Ecuador, Eastern, Blood revenge, war, and victory feasts among the Jibaro Indians of (Karsten). Ecuador, Province of Imbabura, The Quichua-speaking Indians of (Gillin). Ecuador, The archeology of (Collier)_._.-_------------- Ecuador, The historic tribes of (Murra)_-_-_------------- Eliot’s Indian Bible. See Bulletin 13. Emerson, N. B. Unwritten literature of Hawaii__-_-_-_--- Empire’s children: the people of Tzintzuntzan (Foster and Ospina). QQ les} testes lee Bo CO ae = Se BUREAU OF AMERICAN ETHNOLOGY 1, 579. 11. 13, 263. 3, 205. 6, 373. 15, 205. 11, 351. 6. 47. 133, Anthrop. Pap. No. 20. 140. 141. 153. 157, Anthrop. Pap. No. 44. 144, 13, 263. 73. 96. 10. 62. 19, 1013. 73. 128, Anthrop. Pap. No. 16. 143, vol. 2, pp. 767- 784. 143, vol. 2, pp. 785- 821. 38. 6. INDEX TO AUTHORS AND TITLES Pee CHEE CHC) 2 te 8 2 Se ee ee Bekimo,' Central, ‘The (Soas)__-...- - - est soutese ana See also Point Barrow; Ungava district. Eskimo about Bering Strait, The (Nelson)______________ Eskimo language, Bibliography of the (Pilling)_________- See also Bulletin 40 (pt. 1). Esthetology, or the science of activities designed to give pleasure (Powell). Ethnobotany: of the Tewa Indians (Robbins, Harrington, and Freire-Marreco). of the Thompson Indians of British Columbia (Steedman). of the Zuni Indians (M. C. Stevenson) See also Plants. Ethnography of Hispaniola, The (Ciguayo) Ethnography of Hispaniola, The (Taino) Ethnogeography of the Tewa Indians (Harrington) _______ Ethnographical material on the Jivaro Indians, Historical and (Stirling). Ethnographical survey of the Miskito aan Sumu Indians of Honduras and Nicaragua (Conzemius). Ethnography, grammar, and texts, Dakota (Riggs)_______ Ethnography of Puerto Rico, The (Hostos) Ethnography of the Chaco (Métraux)_________________- Ethnography of the Fox Indians (Jones)_______________- Ethnology: of Central America, The post-Conquest: An intro- duction (Johnson). of the Caddo Indians, Source material on the history and (Swanton). of the Ciboney, The (Garcia Valdés)_______________ oOfthestewakiutl) (untand S0as)=-2-2-= 52-52 of the Ungava district (Turner)__._2/._..-2._-2_-_- Ethnozoology of South America, Fauna and (Gilmore) ___- Ethnozoology of the Tewa Indians (Henderson and Harrington). Evans, Clifford: A ceramic study of Virginia archeology. With appendix, An analysis of projectile points and large blades (Holland). and Meggers, Betty J. Archeological investigations at the mouth of the Amazon. In press. Evolution of language (Powell)__..._......-_-___-_--_- Ewers, John C.: Hair pipes in Plains Indian adornment, a study in Indian and White ingenuity. In press. 143, vol. 65. 6, 399. 61 5, pp. 53- 18 (pt. 2), 3 Ve 19, Lv. 55. 45, 441. 30, 31. 143, vol. 143, vol. 539. 29, 29. ile 106. 9. 143, vol. 542. 143, vol. 370. 125. 143, vol. 198. 132. 143, vol. 505. 35, 43. 11, 159. 143, vol. 464. 56. 160. 167. 3 pale 4, p. 539. 4, pp. 522- 4, pp. 540- 1, pp. 197- 4, pp. 195- 4, pp. 503- 6, pp. 345- 164, Anthrop. Pap. No. 50. 62 Ewers, John C.—Continued The horse in Blackfoot Indian culture, with compara- tive material from other western tribes. editor. Of the Crow Nation, by HMdwin Thompson Denig. Excavation of a site at Santiago Ahuitzotla, D. F. Mexico (Tozzer). Excavations in the Chama Valley, New Mexico (Jeancon)_ Excavations in the McNary Reservoir Basin near Umatilla, Oregon (Osborne). Jn press. Exploration of an Adena Mound at Natrium, West Virginia (Solecki). Exploration of the Burton Mound at Santa Barbara, California (Harrington). Explorations along the Missouri River Bluffs in Kansas and Nebraska (Fowke). Explorations, archeological, at Macon, Ga. (Kelly)_______ Expression, Philology, or the science of activities designed for (Powell). Face and body painting of the Thompson Indians, British Columbia, Tattooing and (Teit). Factionalism at Taos Pueblo, New Mexico (Fenton). In press. Fairs in Pert, Indian markets and (Valecdrcel)___________ Fauna, early vertebrate, of British Columbia coast (Fisher) Fauna and ethnozoology of South America (Gilmore) ____- Feast of the Dead, or Ghost Dance, at Six Nations Reserve, Canada, The (Fenton and Kurath). Fenner, Clarence N. (collaborator). Early man in South America. Fenton, William N.: Factionalism at Taos Pueblo, New Mexico. In press. Iroquois suicide: A study in the stability of a culture pattern. The Iroquois Eagle Dance, an offshoot of the Calumet Dance. With an analysis of the Iroquois Eagle Dance and songs, by Gertrude Prokosch Kurath. Tonawanda longhouse ceremonies: Ninety years after Lewis Henry Morgan. editor. Symposium on local diversity in Iroquois culture. No. 1. Introduction: The concept of locality and the program of Iroquois research (Fenton). No. 2. Concepts of land ownership among the Iroquois and their neighbors (Snyder- man). exp tes!) oe} eo} [es} = lee} (ee) ee) BUREAU OF AMERICAN ETHNOLOGY 159. 151, Anthrop. No. 33. 74. Pap. 81. 166. 151, Anthrop. No. 40. 44, 23. 76, 151. 119, Anthrop. No. 1. 20, CXXXIX. Pap. 45, 397. 164, Anthrop. No. 56. 143, vol. 2, pp. 477- 482. 133, Anthrop. Pap. No. 20, p. 133. 143, vol. 6, pp. 345- 464. 149, 139-165. Pap. 52. 164, Anthrop. Pap. vo. 56. 128, Anthrop. Pap. No. 14. 156, pp. 1-222. 128, Anthrop. Pap. No. 15. 149. INDEX TO AUTHORS AND TITLES Fenton, William N.—Continued editor. Symposium on local diversity in Iroquois culture—Continued No. 3. Locality as a basic factor in the develop- ment of Iroquois social structure (Fenton). No. 4. Some psychological determinants of cul- ture change in an Iroquoian community (Wallace). No. 5. The religion of Handsome Lake: Its origin and development (Deardorff). No. 6. Local diversity in Iroquois music and dance (Kurath). No. 7. The Feast of the Dead, or Ghost Dance, at Six Nations Reserve, Canada (Fenton and Kurath). No. 8. Iroquois women, then and now (Randle). Newmches, unt (Cushing) 22... .<.2cessit luce eee teve Fewkes, Jesse Walter: Aborigines of Porto Rico and neighboring islands____ Antiquities, Certain, of eastern Mexico_-_-_---------- Antiquities of Mesa Verde National Park: Cliff Palace Antiquities of Mesa Verde National Park: Spruce-tree House. Antiquities of the upper Verde River and Walnut Creek Valleys, Arizona. Archeological expedition to Arizona in 1895____-_-_-- Casa. Grande,Arizona 2822ohe! dee ewe). eh Designs on prehistoric Hopi pottery_.._-._____----- Hopi katcinas, drawn by native artists________-__-- Prehistoric island culture area of America, A-------- Prehistoric villages, castles, and towers of south- western Colorado. Preliminary report on Navaho National Monument, Arizona. Tusayan Flute and Snake ceremonies____________--- pbuRsavanekatemasr: 2 o2eo 24) ise ow ee Tusayan migration traditions___.__..__.____.-_-_-- Tusayan Snake ceremonies___...____....-.--_----- Two summers’ work in pueblo ruins__________-_---- Fiction, legends, and myths, Seneca (Curtin and Hewitt) __ Hiremmsling(Cooper)).cta_.2 as< 2. Sievert tl SEITE 2 eds Fisher, Edna. Early vertebrate fauna of the British Columbia coast (appendix). Fisher, Margaret Welpley (editor). Fox Indians (Jones). Fisk poisons;(Heizer): 2. of bee Wawa worded et ae Ethnography of the Flagstaff, Arizona, a survey of prehistoric sites in the region of (Colton). Flannery, Regina. Some notes on a few sites in Beaufort County, South Carolina. 63 72 3. 25, 3. 25, 221. 51. Al. 28, 181. 17, 519. 28, 25. 33, 207. 21, 3. 34, 35. 70. 50. 19, 957. 15, 245. 19, 573. 16, 267. 22 (pt. 1), 3. 32, 37. 143, vol. 5, pp. 283- 292. 133, Anthrop. Pap. No. 20, p. 133. 125. 143, vol. 5, pp. 277- 281. 104. 133, Anthrop. Pap. No. 21. 64 BUREAU OF AMERICAN ETHNOLOGY Fletcher, Alice C.: The Hako: A Pawnee ceremony_______________---- and La Flesche, Francis. The Omaha tribe______-_-_- Fletcher, Robert. On prehistoric trephining and cranial amulets. Florida, The Seminole Indians of (MacCauley) _________- Flute and Snake ceremonies, Tusayan (Fewkes)________- Folk-lore, An inquiry into the animism and, of the Guiana Indians (Roth). Food-gathering tribes of the Venezuelan Llanos (Kirchhoff) Form and ornament in ceramic art (Holmes)___________- Formulas: Cherokee sacred, and medicinal prescriptions, The Swimmer manuscript: (Mooney and Olbrechts). Sacred, of the Cherokees (Mooney)______________-- Forstemann, E., and others. Mexican and Central Amer- ican antiquities, calendar systems, and history. Foster, George M., assisted by Gabriel Ospina. Empire’s children: the people of Tzintzuntzan. and Foster, Mary L. Sierra Popoluca speech__----- Foster, Mary L., and Foster, George M. Sierra Popoluca speech. Fowke, Gerard: Antiquities of central and southeastern Missouri- --- Archeological investigations.__........_-._-------- Archeological investigations—II________________--- Archeologic investigations in James and Potomac Valleys. slonevarts s2o 8S. oF 2 Secu 5 tou - no oe Ta met ope a Fox ethnology, Contributions to (Michelson)____-____--- Fox ethnology—II, Contributions to (Michelson) _-_____-_- Fox Indian woman, Autobiography of (Michelson) -___---- Fox Indians: Fithnorraphyol (ORES) sess ena ae ee Mythical origin of the White Buffalo dance of the (Michelson). Notes on the Buffalo-head dance of the Thunder gens of the (Michelson). Observations on the Thunder dance of the Bear gens of the (Michelson). The owl sacred pack of the (Michelson)____________- Fox miscelianya(Michelson)-22 3. 2225. See eee Fox mortuary customs and beliefs, Notes on (Michelson) - _ Fox society known as ‘‘The Singing Around Rite,” Tradi- ditional origin of the (Michelson). Fox society known as “Those Who Worship the Little Spotted Buffalo,’’ Notes on the (Michelson). Fox Wapandwiweni, Notes on the (Michelson) ________--- Frachtenberg, Leo J. Alsea texts and myths__________- See also Bulletin 40 (pt. 2). Freire-Marreco, Barbara, and others. Ethnobotany of the Tewa Indians. 22 (pt. 2), 5: ig live 5. 5, 469. 19, 957. 30, 103. 143, vol. 4, pp. 445- 468. 4, 437. 99. 37. 76. 44, 399. 23. 13, 47. 85. 95. 40, 291. 125. 40, 23. 87. 89. 72. 114. 40, 351. 40, 541. 40, 497. 105. 67. 55. INDEX TO AUTHORS AND TITLES Frenguelli, Joaquin. The present status of the theories concerning primitive man in South America. RulniogMhes(Métraux) S22 ete se oe re Furniture, dwellings, and implements, Omaha (Dorsey) -- Hurniture;, Household (Bennett)2222-222 22527 2e_2_ see 4 Furuhelm, J. Notes on the natives of Alaska___________ Galvao, Eduardo. See Wagley, Charles, and Galvao, Eduardo. Gambling Games and (Cooper)_- = === 2---- 2-2 Gamesjandjzambling: (Cooper) s_. 9 a ee Games of the North American Indians (Culin)___________ Gann, Mary. See Gann, Thomas, and Gann, Mary. Gann, Thomas: Maya Indians of southern Yucatan and northern British Honduras. Mounds in northern Honduras____.....1 =._..------ and Gann, Mary. Archeological investigations in the Corozal District of British Honduras. See also Cave, A. J. E. Garcia Valdes, Pedro. The ethnology of the Ciboney__-_ Gatschet, Albert S.: Method of recording Indian languages_______-______ The Klamath Indians of southwestern Oregon_____-__ and Swanton, John R. A dictionary of the Atakapa language. Ge, The Northwestern and Central (Lowie)____________- Gems and ornamental stones, The mining of, by American Indians (Ball). General index, annual reports of the Bureau of American Ethnology (Bonnerjea). Geographical pathology of Chile, The (Herzog)_____-_-_- Geography of South America, The (Sauer)_____-________ Geology of the Hodges site, Quay County, New Mexico (Judson). Geology of the Pickwick Basin in adjacent parts of Ten- nessee, Mississippi, and Alabama (Jones). Georgia, Macon, Archeological explorations at (Kelly) ___ Gesture signs and signals of the North American Indians (Mallery). Gesture speech, Introduction to the study of sign language as illustrating (Mallery). Ghost-dance religion (Mooney)-_--___-._-.__-___-_-__-- B B A 2 Be oo 65 143, vol. 6, pp. 11- Vv. 143, vol. 1, p. 571. 13, 263. 143, vol. 5, pp. 21- 27. rie: 143, vol. 5, pp. 503- 524. 143, vol. 5, pp. 503- 524. 2AM 64. 19, 655. 123, Anthrop. Pap. No. 7. 143, vol. 4, pp. 503- 505. 1, 579. 2. 108. 143, vol. 1, pp. 477- 517. 128, Anthrop. Pap. No. 18. 48, 25. 143, vol. 6, pp. 137- 144, 143, vol. 6, pp. 319- 344. 154, 285-302. 129, 327. 119, Anthrop. Pap. No. 1. 14, 641. 66 Gibbs, George: Dictionary ofthe Niskwalliise: 2-22 3050-222 = Tribes of western Washington and northwestern Oregon. Use of numerals among the T’sim si-an’_________-_- and Dall, W.H. Vocabularies [of tribes of the extreme Northwest ]. Gifford, E,W. The Kamia of Imperial Valley__-__--_---- Gila and Salt River Valleys, upper, Antiquities of (Hough) - Gilbert, William Harlen, Jr. The Eastern Cherokees____ Gillin, John: Moche: a Peruvian coastal community______-_-__-_-- Quichua-speaking Indians of the Province of Imbabura (Ecuador) and their anthropometric relations with the living populations of the Andean area. Tribes ‘of: the!/Guianas...2bo2e' Yes ee A eee Gilmore, Melvin R. Uses of plants by Indians of the Missouri River region. Gilmore, Raymond M. Fauna and ethnozoology of South America. Goajiro, The (Armstrong and Métraux)___-------------- Goddard, P. E. Sce Bulletin 40 (pt. 1). Gold and other metals, Use of, among the ancient inhabi- tants of Chiriqui (Holmes). Goldman, Irving. Tribes of the Uaupés Caquetaé region __ Grammar, texts, and ethnography, Dakota (Riggs) ------ Gran Chaco, The present-day Indians of the (Belaieff) - -- Graphic system and ancient methods of the Mayas (Brinton). Greater Pampa, The archeology of the (Willey) --_---_--- Great Salt Lake region, Ancient caves of the (Steward) -- Green Bear who was blessed with a sacred pack (Michelson) Griffin, James B. An analysis and interpretation of the ceramic remains from two sites near Beaufort, South Carolina. Guaitaedsebhet (Mie trams). ae ae a ee eee Guajs> The) (Nimuendayt) S302 ee ee eee Guaporé River, Tribes of the right bank of the (Lévi- Strauss). Guarani: (The: (Métraux) a 364): le eee Guaté, The (Métraux) B BUREAU OF AMERICAN ETHNOLOGY 1 (pt. 2), 285. 1, 157. 1, 155. 1, 121. 97. 35. 133, Anthrop. No. 23. Pap. 3. 128, Anthrop. No. 16. Pap. 143, vol. 3, pp. 860. 33, 43. 799— 143, vol. 6, pp. 464. 143, vol. 4, pp. 383. 3. 143, vol. 3, pp. 798. 3: 143, vol. 1, pp. 380. 5 (pt. 3), Xvir. 371- 143, vol. 1, pp. 25- 46. 116. 119, Anthrop. Pap. No. 4. 133, Anthrop. Pap. No. 22. 143, vol. 1, pp. 521- 522. 143, vol. 3, pp. 135- 136. 143, vol. 3, pp. 371- 379. 143, vol. 3, pp. 69- 94. 143, vol. 1, pp. 409- 418. INDEX TO AUTHORS AND TITLES Guayaki, The (Métraux and Baldus)__________________- Guaymi grammar (Alphonse). Jn press_____-__-------- Guayupé and Sae, The (Kirchhoff)_.........-......__.- (Giickamihendiowie) ase eee. oo een oe Guernsey, Samuel J. See Kidder, A. V. Guiana Indians: Additional studies of the arts, crafts, and customs of the, with special reference to those of southern British Guiana (Roth). Animism and folk-lore of the, An inquiry into the (Roth). Arts, crafts, and customs of the, An introductory study of the (Roth). (Guansselribes of the:(Gillam)! 22.28. se eet. ee Haag, William G. Pickwick pottery. Habitationss (Bennett) 2-425. -2 5.2 eee Boe Habitations. See Dwellings; Houses. Haeberlin, H. K., Teit, James A., and Roberts, Helen H. (under direction of Franz Boas). Coiled basketry in British Columbia and surrounding region. Haida language. See Bulletin 40 (pt. 1). Haida texts and myths (Swanton)___________________-- Hair of South American Indians, The pigmentation and (Steggerda). Hair pipes in Plains Indian adornment, a study in Indian and White ingenuity (Ewers). Jn press. Hako, The: A Pawnee ceremony (A. C. Fletcher)_______- Halbert, Henry S. (editor). ==- = === Thearcheology of (Strong). 2-23... =+---- =. See also British Honduras. Hopi katcinas, drawn by native artists (Fewkes) __-_----- Hopi pottery, prehistoric, Designs on (Fewkes) ----- - - - - - See also Tusayan. Horse in Blackfoot Indian culture, The, with comparative material from other western tribes (Ewers). Horton, Donald. The Munduructi__------------------- Hostos, Adolfo de. The ethnography of Puerto Rico___- Hou, Ding. See Nickerson, Norton H. Hough, Walter. Antiquities of the upper Gila and Salt River Valleys. House mounds, Aboriginal (Fowke)-------------------- 10. 143, vol. 3, pp. 454- 463. 52. 106. 19, 655. 143, vol. 4, pp. 71- 120. 21, 3. 33, 208. 159. 143, vol. 3, pp. 271- 282. 143, vol. 4, pp. 540- 542. 35: 76. INDEX TO AUTHORS AND TITLES Houses: and house-life of the American aborigines (Morgan) -- and house use of the Sierra Tarascans (Beals, Carrasco, and McCorkle). INavahor(@s Mindeletivees.-o6--- 8-2 ae tae oe eK See also Dwellings. House types, archeological remains in eastern Arizona (Roberts). Hrdlicka, Ales: Anthropological survey in Alaska___--_____-------- Physical anthropology of the Lenape or Delawares, and of the eastern Indians in general. Physiological and medical observations among the Indians of southwestern United States and northern Mexico. Recent discoveries [of remains] attributed to early man in America. Skeletal material from Missouri___.___-_----------- Skeletal remains suggesting or attributed to early man in North America. Tuberculosis among certain Indian tribes of the United States. in collaboration with Holmes, Willis, Wright, and Fenner. Early man in South America. Pianesaine: (Canals Pra). 2-22-2202 - 22a k oe Hudson Bay Territory, Ethnology of the Ungava district (Turner). Hula, Sacred songs of the (Emerson)_--___-_-_--------- Human trophies, Warfare, cannibalism, and (Métraux) -- Hunt, George. See Boas, Franz. Kwakiutl Indians. Hupa language. See Bulletin 40 (pt. 1). Ethnology of the Illustrated catalogue: of collections from New Mexico and Arizona in 1879 (J. Stevenson). of collections from New Mexico in 1880 (J. Stevenson) of collections from pueblos in 1881 (J. Stevenson) _-___ of collections made in 1881 (Holmes)____-__-____-__- Illustration of the method of recording Indian languages (Dorsey, Gatschet, and Riggs). Imbelloni, José. Cephalic deformations of the Indians in Argentina. Imperial Valley, The Kamia of (Gifford)___.._-___------ Implements: Omaha dwellings, furniture and (Dorsey) -_-___--_-__-_- Stone, of the Potomac-Chesapeake tidewater province (Holmes). Inca culture at the time of the Spanish Conquest (Rowe) -- > PPP 71 37, 103-112. 52. 143, vol. 1, pp. 169- 175. 11, 159. 38. 143, vol. 5, pp. 383- 409. 35, 43. 2, 307. 2, 423. 3, 511. 3, 427. 1, 579. 143, vol. 6, pp. 53- 55. 97. 13, 263. 15, 3. 143, vol. 2, pp. 183- 330. v2 BUREAU OF AMERICAN ETHNOLOGY Index, General, annual reports of the Bureau of American A _ 48, 25. Ethnology (Vols. 1-48) (Bonnerjea). Index to Schoolcraft’s ‘‘ Indian tribes of the United States,” compiled by Frances 8. Nichols. Indian caste of Peru, 1795-1940: a population study based upon tax records and census reports (Kubler). Indian copper beads found at the McNary Dam, Oregon, Report on the composition of (appendix 3). Indian markets and fairs in Pert (Valedrcel)_-_________- Imdianumissionsy (Mooney, == se a ee Indian skeletal remains, South American, Anthropometry of (Stewart and Newman). Indian skeletal remains, South American, Deformity, trephining, and mutilation in (Stewart). Indian skeletal remains, South American, Pathological changes in (Stewart). Indian skeletal remains from the Doering and Kobs sites, Addicks Reservoir, Texas (Newman). Indian Territory, Ancient quarry in (Holmes) -_---------- Indian trails of the Southeast (Myer)___-____----------- Indian tribes of North America, The (Swanton) _-------- Indian tribes of northern Mato Grosso, Brazil, by Kalervo Oberg, with an appendix entitled “‘ Anthropometry of the Umotina, Nambicuara, and Iranxe, with comparative data from other northern Mato Grosso tribes,” by Marshall T. Newman. Indians, South American, Anthropometry of (Steggerda) -- Indians, South American, Blood groups of (Boyd) -- ----- Indians, South American, The basal metabolic rates of (Wilson). Indians, South American, The languages of (Mason) ----- Indians, South American, The pigmentation and hair of (Steggerda). Indians of Brazil, The anthropometry of the (Bastos d’ Avila). Indians of Chile, The anthropometry of the (Henckel) ---- Indians of the Southeastern United States, The (Swanton) - Industries; Technology, or the science of (Powell) ___-__-- Inhabitants of the North Chilean Coast, The historic (Bird) Initiation cites Boyse (Métraus) 222-22 nee ee eee Innuit, Terms of relationship used by the (Dall)_-------- Institutions; Sociology, or the science of (Powell) _------- Instruction; Sophiology, or the science of activities de- signed to give (Powell). Internal organs among the races of Chile, The physical anthropology of (Henckel). B P B B M B Bea ne wo 152. 14, 166. 143, vol. 2, pp. 477- 482. uh 143, vol. 6, pp. 19- 42. 143, vol. 6, pp. 43- 48. 143, vol. 6, pp. 49- 52. 154, 253-266. 21. 42, 727. 145. 15. 143, vol. 6, pp. 57- 69. 143, vol. 6, pp. 91- 95. 143, vol. 6, pp. 97- 104. 143, vol. 6, pp. 157- 317. 143, vol. 6, pp. 85- 90. 143, vol. 6, pp. 71- 84. 143, vol. 6, pp. 121- 135. 137. 20, XXIXx. 148, vol. 2, pp. 595- 597. 143, vol. 5, pp. 375- 382. UB UI 20, LIX. 205) CLXCXI- 143, vol. 6, pp. 145- 156. INDEX TO AUTHORS AND TITLES Introduction: toyNatick dictionary’ (Hale)ue- ..--..22-2-<:-.-+2-5 to Pawnee archeology (Wedel)__._-.--------------- to the study of Indian languages (Powell) __________- to the study of mortuary customs (Yarrow)_-_----_- to the study of sign language (Mallery)_------------ to Zufi ceremonialism (Bunzel)____.._.-_-.-------- fraqucmnecosmolopgy (Hewitt) 2-2-2295). ee ene od Iroquoian cosmology: second part, with introduction and notes (Hewitt). Iroquoian languages, Bibliography of the (Pilling) --___--_- iroquois, Myths of the.(Smith)._.._. =. _2-_2=~_s-=-=-.- Iroquois Eagle Dance, an offshoot of the Calumet Dance (Fenton), with an analysis of the Iroquois Eagle Dance and songs (Kurath). Iroquois suicide; A study in the stability of a culture pattern (Fenton). Iroquois women, then and now (Randle) -__-------------- Island culture area of America, A prehistoric (Fewkes) --_ ileta. New Viexico, (Parsons)... ===. -- 5.5 7- 2-0 - Ives, Ronald L. (translator and editor). Sedelmayr’s Relacién of 1746. James and Potomac Valleys, Archeologic investigations in (Fowke). Jarrell, Myrtis. See Kurz, Rudolph Friederich. Jeancon, J. A. Excavations in the Chama Valley, New Mexico. Jelcombher(bowle) 22222 eae ee ee ee ee Jemez Plateau, New Mexico, Antiquities of the (Hewitt) _- Jenks, Albert Ernest. Wild rice gatherers of the upper lakes. Jenness, Diamond. The Carrier Indians of the Bulkley River: Their social and religious life. Jennings, Jesse D., Willey, Gordon R., and Newman, Marshall T. The Ormond Beach Mound, East Central Florida. Jn press. and Setzler, Frank M. Peachtree Mound and village site, Cherokee County, North Carolina. Jesuit missions in South America (Métraux)_-----.------ Jibaro Indians of eastern Ecuador, Blood revenge, war, and victory feasts among the (Karsten). Jicaque, The Mosquito, Sumo, Paya, and. The Caribbean Lowland tribes: (Kirchhoff). Jivaro Indians, Historical and ethnographical material (Stirling). Johnson, Frederick: CentralvAmerntcan cultures ses 22 ee The Caribbean Lowland tribes: The Talamanca Division. Bm WD PWww 73 25. 112. 1 and 2. 4. 3h, 47, 467. 21, 127. 43, 499. 6. 2, 47. 156. 128, Anthrop. Pap. No. 14. 149, 167-180. 34, 35. 47, 193. 123, Anthrop. Pap. No. 9. 23. 81. 143, vol. 1, p. 567. 32. 19, 1013. 133, Anthrop. Pap. No. 25. 164, Anthrop. Pap. No. 49. 131. 143, vol. 5, pp. 645- 653. 79. 143, vol. 4, pp. 219- 229. 117. 143, vol. 4, pp. 43- 68. 143, vol. 4, pp. 231- 251. 74 BUREAU OF AMERICAN ETHNOLOGY Johnson, Frederick—Continued The Meso-American Division______--------------- The post-Conquest ethnology of Central America---- See also Strong, William Duncan, and Johnson, Frederick. Jones, J. A. The Sun Dance of the Northern Ute------- Jones, Walter B. Geology of the Pickwick Basin in ad- jacent parts of Tennessee, Mississippi, and Alabama. Jones, William. Ethnography of the Fox Indians-__-_-_--- Jones, William. See Bulletin 40 (pt. 1). Journal of an expedition to the Mauvaises Terres and the Upper Missouri in 1850, by Thaddeus A. Culbertson (edited by John Francis McDermott). Journal of Rudolph Friederich Kurz (Kurz) _------------ Judd, Neil M. Archeological observations north of the Rio Colorado. Judson, Sheldon. Geology of the Hedges site, Quay County, New Mexico. Jurud-Purts Basins, Tribes of the (Métraux)---.-------- Justice; Sociology, or the science of activities designed for (Powell). Kamia, The, of Imperial Valley (Gifford) --------------- Karsten, Rafael. Blood revenge, war, and victory feasts among the Jibaro Indians of eastern Ecuador. Karuk Indian myths (Harrington)--------------------- Karuk Indians of California, Tobacco among the (Har- rington). Katcinas: Hopi, drawn by native artists (Fewkes) ___---------- Musa yan Pe WIKCS) = oe ee ee Zum (Bunz) 22 52 ae oo ee oe aaa eee Kathlamettextss(80aS))-2-- 223-32 eee eee Kelley, A. R. A preliminary report on archeological ex- plorations at Macon, Ga. Kelly, Isabel, and Palerm, Angel. The Tajin Totonac: Part 1. History, subsistence, shelter, and technology. Kiatuthlanna, eastern Arizona, The ruins at (Roberts) - - - Kidder, Alfred II. The archeology of Venezuela____----- Kidder, Alfred Vincent, and Guernsey, Samuel J. Arch- eological explorations in northeastern Arizona. Kiowa Indians, Calendar history of the (Mooney) -- ----- Kiowa language, Vocabulary of the (Harrington) -- - ----- Kirchhoff, Paul: Food-gathering tribes of the Venezuelan Llanos_---- The Caribbean Lowland tribes: The Mosquito, Sumo, Paya, and Jicaque. 143, vol. 4, pp. 199- 204. 143, vol. 4, pp. 195- 198. 157, Anthrop. Pap. No. 47. 129, 327. 125. 147. 115. 82. 154, 285-302. 143, vol. 3, pp. 657- 686. 20, LIX. 97. 79. 107. 94. 21, 3. 15, 245. AT, 837. 26. 119, Anthrop. Pap No. 1. 13. 100. 143, vol. 4, pp. 413- 438. 65. 17, 129. 84. 143, vol. 4, pp. 445- 468. 143, vol. 4, pp. 219- 229. INDEX TO AUTHORS AND TITLES Kirchhoff, Paul—Continued me Gua vupemnd Saes.28 2.03233 git ja al piherO tomacies ewe re ee Mor eh ah See be, ithe:Pataneororand, Amanies- 2-22 -22)2.5.--22222 The social and political organization of the Andean peoples. The tribes north of the Orinoco River-_-_--------_-_- JR OYeY AVG oe eg ee ge ee en See also Métraux, Alfred, and Kirchhoff, Paul. Kivett, Marvin F. The Woodruff ossuary, a prehistory burial site in Phillips County, Kansas. Klamath Indians of southwestern Oregon, The (Gatschet) - Kroeber, A. L.: Handbook of the Indians of California______________ shee hibchasae eee ee ee Ae Kroll, W. J. Report on the composition of Indian copper beads found at the McNary Dam, Oregon (appendix 3). In press. Kubler, George: Indian caste of Peru, 1795-1940, The: a population study based upon tax records and census reports. Quechua in the Colonial world, The__---___-____---- Kurath, Gertrude Prokosch. An analysis of the Iroquois Eagle Dance. See also Fenton, William N., editor. Kurz, Rudelph Friederich. Journal of Rudolph Friederich Kurz. Translated by Myrtis Jarrell, edited by J. N. B. Hewitt. Kutenai tales (Boas and Chamberlain)__________ ._____- Kwakiutl Indians, Ethnology of the (Boas)__-_________- Kwakiutl language. See Bulletin 40 (pt. 1). La Barre, Weston. The Uru-Chipaya_________________- Labrets, masks, and certain aboriginal customs (Dall) ___- La Candelaria, The culture of (Willey)_._.___._______-- La Flesche, Francis: A dictionary of the Osage language_________________ The Osage tribe: Rite of the chiefs; sayings of the ancient men. The Osage tribe: Rite of the Wa-xo’-be_____________ 75 143, vol. 4, pp. 885- 391. 143, vol. 4, pp. 439- 444, 143, vol. 4, pp. 339- 348. 143, vol. 5, pp. 293- 311. 143, vol. 4, pp. 481- 493. 143, vol. 3, pp. 869- 881. 154, 103-141. 2. 143, vol. 5, pp. 411- 492. 78. 143, vol. 2, pp. 887- 909. 166. 14. 143, vol. 2, pp. 331- 410. 156, 223. 115. 59. 35, 43. 143, vol. 2, pp. 575- 585. 3, 67. 143, vol. 2, pp. 661- 672. 109. 36, 37. 45, 523. 76 BUREAU OF AMERICAN ETHNOLOGY La Flesche, Francis—Continued he; Osagectribe: The rite of vigil... ee The Osage tribe: Two versions of the child-naming rite. War ceremony and peace ceremony of the Osage Indians. and Fletcher, Alice C. The Omaha tribe_________-__ Bacoa Santa Mani (Mattos) 2282522 S85 =) seas Land cessions, Indian, in the United States (Royce and Thomas). Language: yoo Ot (etowath) oe ee eas ee scene Philology, or the science of (Powell)_--_------------ ‘Ther @egiha (Dorsey). 4 snee a. a. sees ee Languages: Handbook of Indian (Boas, editor)___.------------- Indian, of Mexico and Central America (Thomas and Swanton). Introduction to the study of Indian (Powell)_-_----- Method of recording Indian (Dorsey, Gatschet, and Riggs). Of South American Indians, The (Mason) _-_-_--.----- Of southwestern Colombia, The native tribes and (Ortiz). of the North American Indians, Proof-sheets of a bibliography of the (Pilling). Structural and lexical comparison of the Tunica, Chitimacha, and Atakapa (Swanton). See also Bibliography; Dictionary; Grammar; Texts; Vocabulary. La Plata Littoral, Indians of the Parand Delta and (Lothrop). Larco Hoyle, Rafael. A culture sequence for the North Coast of Perd. La Venta, Tabasco: a study of Olmec ceramics and art (Drucker). With a chapter on structural investigations in 1943 (Wedel), and appendix on technological analyses (Shepard). Legends, and myths, Seneca fiction (Hewitt)-...-.------ Lehmann, Henri: The archeology of the Popaydn region, Colombia-_- -- The Moguex-Coconuco—=—*2 22. SES es ae eee Lehmer, Donald J. Archeological investigations in the Oahe Dam area, South Dakota, 1950-51. Lemhi Shoshoni physical therapy (Steward) _------------ Lenape, or Delawares, Physical anthropology of the (Hrdlitka). 39, 31. 43, 23. 101. ba ele 143, vol. 1, pp. 399- 400. 18 (pt. 2), 521. ae 20, CKXXIX. 6. 40. 44, 1 and 2. 1, 579. 143, vol. 6, pp. 157- 317. 143, vol. 2, pp. 911- 914. PA, 68. 143, vol. 1, pp. 177- 190. 143, vol. 2, pp. 149- 175. 153. 32, 37. 143, vol. 2, pp. 861- 864. 143, vol. 2, pp. 969- 974. 158. 119, Anthrop. Pap. No. 5. 62. INDEX TO AUTHORS AND TITLES Lenca, The. The Northern Highland tribes: (Stone) -____ Letters, Omaha and Ponka (Dorsey)______---_-_-__---- Letters to Jack Wilson, the Paiute Prophet, written be- tween 1908 and 1911, edited and with an introduction by Grace M. Dangberg. Jn press. Lévi-Strauss, Claude: PIC ON AI DICNANAS fea Sra cna Se Se cree AL! BYEe A ULSOV EA OF 95) 01 | 0 a eg The use of wild plants in tropical South America____ Tribes of the right bank of the Guaporé River______- ribes of the upper Xingd River_______.......2.... Lexicology, Comparative [of the Serian and Yuman lan- guages] (Hewitt). Limitations to the use of some anthropologic data (Powell) Linguistic classification of Algonquian tribes, Preliminary report on the (Michelson). Linguistic classification of Cree and Montagnais-Naskapi dialects (Michelson). Linguistic families: of America north of Mexico, Indian (Powell)_______- of the Indian tribes north of Mexico (Mooney)-_---_-_- See also Bulletin 44. Linguistic manuscripts in the library of the Bureau of Ethnology, Catalogue of (Pilling). Linguistic material from the tribes of southern Texas and northeastern Mexico (Swanton). Linguistic stocks north of Mexico, Map of (Powell)______ Rinkind, Wiliam: ‘The Carajas 2. =. 2252-5. 554 252 List of publications of the Bureau of American Ethnology! Literature of Hawaii, Unwritten (Emerson) ____________- Local diversity in Iroquois music and dance (Kurath)____ Locality as a basic factor in the development of Iroquois social structure (Fenton). Lothrop, Samuel K.: Indians of the Parand Delta and La Plata Littoral___ the archeology of Panama 229. dk ere Sa pheveomtaron Chile. s.25. Jien ss bth wees ed The tribes west and south of the Panamd Canal_____ Co as ae B teh 143, vol. 4, pp. 205- PAW fe 11. 164, Anthrop. No. 55. Pap. 143, vol. 3, pp. 361- 369. 143, vol. 3, pp. 305. 143, vol. 6, pp. 486. 143, vol. 3, pp. 379. 143, vol. 3, pp. 348. 18, 299*. 299- 465— 371- 321- 1, 71. 28, 221. 123, Anthrop. No. 8. ASME 143, vol. 3, pp. 179- 191. 24, 31, 36, 49, 58; A 17, 20, 28, 30. 38. 149, 109-137. 149, 35-54. 143, vol. 1, pp. 177- 190. 143, vol. 4, pp. 143- 167. 143, vol. 2, pp. 633- 636. 143, vol. 4, pp. 253- 256. 4 Since 1914, the List of Publications of the Bureau of American Ethnology has been issued as a Miscel- laneous publication, not as a Bulletin. 78 Louisiana: Choctaw of Bayou Lacomb (Bushnell) ---~----------- Search for songs among the Chitimacha Indians in, (Densmore). The Troyville mounds, Catahoula Parish (Walker) __- Lowie, Robert H.: Eastern Brazil: An introduction._-.---=------=---- Property among the Tropical Forest and Marginal tribes (Lowie). Social and political organization of the Tropical Forest and Marginal tribes. ADHERE OTOTOMeN ORM ei ep eae ee a ee SP Hei ar iniNeie veryeedy SS De ie ele ee eae te eR Gril c kek eae ee tay edhe eos te Hf oveNel (elt oike Steg SE eM EPI B Sete Serre eer eure t The Northwestern and Central Ge_________-______- BhetPancaranti@e. = — Sees eene w vein Rov yeeS aah po TheiSoutherni@ayapOss 2-22) ee = ee eee Me rarer Ute a aay ns ee ee ae The Tropical Forests: An introduction_------------- MacCauley, Clay. The Seminole Indians of Florida-_---- McBryde, Felix Webster. Cultural and historical geog- raphy of southwest Guatemala. McCorkle, Thomas, Beals, Ralph L., and Carrasco, Pedro. Houses and house use of the Sierra Tarascans. McCown, Theodore D. The antiquity of man in South America. McDermott, John Francis, editor. Journal of an expedition to the Mauvaises Terres and the Upper Missouri in 1850 (Culbertson). McGee, W J Preface to The Pamunkey Indians of Virginia (Pollard) Prefatory note to the Maya year (Thomas) -- ------- PrimitivemumbersWie a2 =6= ee ote ee ee ee sRheiSerivingianss 22952 sees en sae ee eee The Siouanvindians*= 2.226468 =<2 3. 5 eee and Muniz, Manuel Antonio. Primitive trephining in Peru. McLeod, B. H. Examination of copper artifacts from the MeNary site, Oregon (appendix 4). Jn Press. Madeira headwaters, Tribes of eastern Bolivia and the (Métraux). Maidu language. See Bulletin 40 (pt. 1). Maine, Wawenock myth texts from (Speck)------------- Maize from the Phillips Ranch sites (Nickerson and Hou) -- BUREAU OF AMERICAN ETHNOLOGY 48. 133, Anthrop. Pap. No. 19. 113. 143, vol. 1, pp. 381- 397. 143, vol. 5, pp. 351- 367. 143, vol. 5, pp. 313- 350. 143, vol. 434, 148, vol. 559. 143, vol. 1, p 143, vol. 1, p. 143, vol. 1 517. 143, vol. 143, vol. 520. 143, vol. 566. 143, vol. 3, pp. 1-56. 5, 469. 4. 1. 143, vol. 6, pp. 1-9. 147. 17. 18. 19, 821. 17, 1. 15, 153. 16, 3. 166. 148, vol. 3, pp. 381- 454. 43, 165. 158, 180. INDEX TO AUTHORS AND TITLES Malalf linguistic families. See Mashacalf, Patashé, and Malali linguistic families (Métraux and Nimuendaji). Mallery, Garrick: A collection of gesture-signs and signals of the North American Indians, with some comparisons. Introduction to the study of sign language among North American Indians as illustrating gesture speech of mankind. Pictographs of the North American Indians; a pre- liminary paper. Picture-writing of the American Indians_-_-__-_______- Sign language among North American Indians com- pared with that among other peoples and deaf-mutes. Man, early: in North America, Skeletal remains of (Hrdli¢ka) _-_- in South America (Hrdliéka and others)__________-_- Man, Primitive, in Argentina. The present status of the theories concerning (Frenguelli). Mandan and Hidatsa music (Densmore)______________-_- Manuscripts: Linguistic, in the library of the Bureau of Ethnology, Catalogue of (Pilling). Notes on certain Maya and Mexican (Thomas) -_-_--_- Manuscript Troano, A study of the (Thomas) _-_-_--__---- Map of linguistic stocks north of Mexico (Powell) ______-- Marginal tribes, Tropical Forest and, Property among the (Lowie). Marginal tribes, Tropical Forest and, Social and political organization of the (Lowie). Markets and fairs in Perd, Indian (Valedrcel)__________- Marquez Miranda, Fernando: The Chaco-Santiaguefio culture_____._______-____-- ihe Disgurta of Argentinas" =. 2S See Mashacalf, Patashé, and Malalf linguistic families, The (Métraux and Nimuendaji). Masks, labrets, and certain aboriginal customs (Dall) _--- Mason, J. Alden. The languages of South American Indians. Massachusetts. See Natick. Massey, William C. and Heizer, Robert F. Aboriginal navigation off the coasts of Upper and Baja California. Matthews, Washington: INS Vat Orsi hversimit hss see spe ns ae ee ae INavajonweavers= = o-oo dee fee ee aed = ed The mountain chant: A Navajo ceremony-----_----- Matto Grosso, western, native tribes of (Métraux)___-__-- Mattos, Anibal. Lagoa Santa Man___________________- Maué and Arapium, The (Nimuendaja) ________-_------ Dre ww se) 143, vol. 367. 143, vol. 350. 143, vol. 482. 5, pp. 5, pp. 2, pp. 143, vol. 660. 143, vol. 654. 143, vol. 545. 3, 67. 143, vol. 6, pp. 317. 2, pp. 2, pp. 1, pp. 151, Anthrop. No. 39. 25 167: 3, 371. 5, 379. 134. 143, vol. 1, pp. 400. 143, vol. 3, pp. 254. . 6, pp. 79 11- 351- 313- 477- 655— 637- 541- 157- Pap. 399- 245-— 80 Maya and Mexican manuscripts, Notes on certain (Thomas). Maya codices, Aids to the study of the (Thomas) -------- Maya hieroglyphs, An introduction to the study of (Morley). Maya Indians, The, of southern Yucatan and northern British Honduras (Gann). Mayan antiquities, calendar systems, and history. See Bulletin 28. Mayan calendar systems (Thomas)-_-..----------------- Mayas, Graphic system and ancient methods of the (Brinton). See also Maya Indians. Maya year, Day symbols of the (Thomas) -----.-------- Mayaryear, Phe\(ebOmas) 22-2. =. 33 Se55 fo eee oe Measures, weights, and calendars, Numbers (Bennett) _--- Medical observations southwestern Indians (Hrdlitka). Medical practices (Ackerknecht)_----..---------------- among Medical practices of the Creek Indians, Religious beliefs and (Swanton). Medicinal prescriptions, The Swimmer manuscript: Cher- okee sacred formulas and (Mooney and Olbrechts). Medicine bundles of the Florida Seminole and the Green Corn Dance, The (Capron). Medicine-men of the Apache, The (Bourke) -_------------ Meggers, Betty J. The archeology of the Amazon Basin and Evans, Clifford. Archeological investigations at the mouth of the Amazon. In press. Nenomineesmusic: (Densmore) -- ee ee ee Menomuinie Indians, “he (Hoffman) --222-2 222222525 =. Mesa Verde National Park, Antiquities of: Cliff. Palacey(Hewkes) 28) __paneee 2 nape Seer ee Spruce-treeliouse (Fewkes) =. = 22. =<. 25 = fhe Meso-American Division, The (Johnson) ---------------- Mestizos of South America (Steggerda)_._._-_----------- Mestizo types, Brazilian (Pourchet)-_.-..---.----.------ Metallurgy (Root) 1-22. 525..32 soe ee Metals, use of gold and other, among the ancient inhabi- tants of Chiriqui (Holmes). Métraux, Alfred: Barkacloths 2-24 2-8 26 2) Saat Dee Ss ee A A B BUREAU OF AMERICAN ETHNOLOGY 3, 3. 6, 253. 57. 64. 19, 693, and 22 (pt. 1), 197. 5 (pt. 3), xv. 16, 199. 18. 143, vol. 5, pp. 601- 610. 34. 143, vol. 5, pp. 621- 643. 42, 473. 99. 151, Anthrop. No. 35. 9, 448. 143, vol. 3, pp. 149- 166. 167. Pap. 102. 14, 3. 51. 41. 143, vol. 4, pp. 19°= 204. 143, vol. 6, pp. 105- 109. 143, vol. 6, pp. 111- 120. 143, vol. 5, pp. 205- 225. 3. 143, vol. 5, pp. 67- 68. INDEX TO AUTHORS AND TITLES Métraux, Alfred—Continued Boys initiation rites! i2 Ss = le See e ke Ethnographysor the’@haco---_- =.= 52_ -- ----- === Jesuit missions in South America__________________ then aman pee iee, es Cele See es ee SUD EO TENG to eae eee

> eS > es) > eles} = tee we Bo PP BUREAU OF AMERICAN ETHNOLOGY 123. 143, vol. 3, pp. 507- 533. 143, vol. 3, pp. 5385— 656. 138. 22. 14, 641. 99. 4. 128, Anthrop, Pap. No. 15. 57. 33, 155. 129, 337. 40, 351. 4. 1, 87. 143, vol. 4, pp. 219- 229. 12,3;B 4. 76. 5, 3. 151, Anthrop. Pap. No. 40. 19, 655. 2, 117. 8. 12. INDEX TO AUTHORS AND TITLES Mounds—Continued Ormond Beach Mound, East Central Florida (Jen- nings, Willey, and Newman). Rembert mounds, Elbert County, Georgia (Caldwell) - The Troyville, Catahoula Parish, La. (Walker) Mountain chant: A Navajo ceremony (Matthews) Munduruct, The (Horton) Muniz, Manuel Antonio, and McGee, W J Primitive trephining in Peru. Mura and Pirahd, The (Nimuendajii)_________________- Murdoch, John: Ethnological results of the Point Barrow expedition__ editor. Ethnology of the Ungava district, Hudson Bay Territory (Turner). Murie, R. James. See Annual Report 22, pt. 2, p. 5. Murra, John: The Cayapa and Colorado bheshistonic.tribes of Picuadonss=so= See = Music: iinppewa, WMensmadre)2..- 2 2... fee GUNG ENG DYES ATES 00 (0 2) ie aa Eskimo. See Boas, 6th Annual Report, pp. 648-658. Pa waliann(eimerson)2 = sayin: Es depres bay Indians of British Columbia (Densmore) _-_-_________- Mandan and Hidatsa (Densmore)______._________-_- Menominee! (Densmore) sei se yee = Seely yep eees Nootka and Quileute (Densmore) Northern) Wite: (Densmore) =e) oe eae of Acoma, Isleta, Cochiti, and Zuni Pueblos (Densmore). Jn press. Papapo (Densmore) 29s. eee seen Data Pawnee, @>ensmore) | > >> > 85 164, Anthrop. Pap. No. 49. 154, 303-320. 113. 5, 379. 143, vol. 3, pp. 271- 282. 16, 3. 143, vol. 3, pp. 255- 269. 9, 3. 11, 159. 143, vol. 4, pp. 277- 291. 143, vol. 2, pp. 785- 821. 45, 53. 136, Anthrop. Pap. No. 28. 38. 136, Anthrop. Pap. No. 27. 80. 102. 124. 5: 165. 90. 93. 161. 151, Anthrop. Pap. No. 36. 61. 110. 9. 143, vol. 6, pp. 43- 48. 42, 727. 41, 485. 40, 23. 86 Mythology: of the North American Indians (Powell) Tsimshian (Boas) Myths: Acoma origin’ (Stirling)... seetig Se» Eee ae Alsea texts and (Frachtenberg)__..________________- and tales of the Southeastern Indians (Swanton) -____ Diné, The: Origin myths of the Navaho Indians (O’Bryan). Karuls Indian; (Harrington): 22)... 2...) 2222.22 Kutenai tales (Boas and Chamberlain) of the Cherokee (Mooney) of the Haida (Swanton) of the Troquois" (Smith) ait) stncq wy oesetl Lrakh Bat of the Tlingit (Swanton) Seneca fiction, legends, and (Curtin and Hewitt) ___- Shoshoni, Some western (Steward) Zuni creation, Outlines of (Cushing) Zuni origin (Bunzel) Nambicuara, The (Lévi-Strauss) Nareotics, Stimulants and (Cooper) -......--..--<=.22-=: Natick dictionary (Trumbull), with introduction by Edward Everett Hale. Native tribes and dialects of Connecticut: A Mohegan- Pequot diary (Speck). Navaho housess(C: Mindeleff)e eso) 45 oe Syed ees Navaho National Monument, Arizona, visit to (Fewkes) _- Navajo ceremony, The mountain chant: A (Matthews) -- Navajo Indians, Ceremonial of Hasjelti Dailjis and mythi- cal sand painting of the (J. Stevenson). Navajo silversmiths (Matthews) Navajo weavers (Matthews). 2-2. .2s:S222.....-.238 Nelson, E. W. The Eskimo about Bering Strait________- Newman, Marshall T. Indian skeletal remains from the Doering and Kobs sites, Addicks Reservoir, Texas. and Jennings, Jesse D. and Willey, Gordon R. The Ormond Beach Mound, East Central Florida. In press. and Snow, Charles E. Preliminary report on the skeletal remains from Pickwick Basin, Alabama. and Stewart, T. D. Anthropometry of South American Indian skeletal remains. Anthropometry of the Umotina, Nambicuara, and Iranxe, with comparative data from other Northern Mato Grosso tribes. Indian skeletal material from the Berrian’s Island cists (45-BN-3), lower McNary Reservoir, Wash- ington (appendix 1). In press. BUREAU OF AMERICAN ETHNOLOGY 1, 17. 31, 29. 135. 67. 88. 163. 107. 59. 1953: 29. 2 NAG 39. BUA ail 136, Anthrop. Pap. No. 31. 1B} sil. 47, 545. 143, vol. 3, pp. 361- 369. 143, vol. 5, pp. 525- 558. 25. 43, 199. 17, 469. 50. 5, 379. 8, 229. 2, 167. 3, 371. 18, 3. 154, 253-266. 164, Anthrop. Pap. No. 49. 129, 393. 143, vol. 6, pp. 19- 42. 15, 128. 166. INDEX TO AUTHORS AND TITLES New Mexico: Excavations in the Chama Valley (Jeancon)________- Illustrated catalogue of collections from, in 1879 (J. Stevenson). int SSO (Ja stevenson) = 4-225. 5525200 ee Ins SSileGaStevenson) seeers oe bee eee ne sletam (Parsons) Sette cee ee ated ec eg a eee Jemez Plateau, Antiquities of the (Hewett)________- Rio Grande Valley, The physiography of the (Hewett, Henderson, and Robbins). upper Gila and Salt River valleys, Antiquities of the (Hough). See also Roberts, Frank H. H., Jr. Nicaragua: Ethnographical survey of the Miskito and Sumu Indians of Honduras and (Conzemius). The archeology of Costa Rica and (Strong) __-_--_---- Nichols, Frances S., compiler. Index to Schoolcraft’s “Indian tribes of the United States.” Nickerson, Norton H., and Hou, Ding. Maize from the Dodd and Phillips Ranch sites Nimuendaja, Curt: Little-known tribes of the lower Amazon___________- Little-known tribes of the lower Tocantins River region. The Cayabi, Tapanyuna, and Apiac4__-__-.._-_____- The Cowahib, Parintintin, and their neighbors______- The Maué and Arapium The Mura and Pirah4é The Tucuna ‘CheshuriwaravanGeAruaeen a main) een. Sey te - Tribes of the lower and middle Xing River and Métraux, Alfred. The Amanayé_____________- See also Métraux, Alfred, and Nimuendajd, Curt. Niskwalli, Dictionary of the (Gibbs)__________________- Nomads of the long bow: the Siriono of eastern Bolivia (Holmberg). Nootka and Quileute music (Densmore) ____-__---_----- Nootkan tribes, The Northern and Central (Drucker) ___- Norris Basin in eastern Tennessee, An archeological survey of the (Webb). icoleoiee) 87 81. 2, 307. 2, 423. 3, 511. 47, 193. 32. 54. 35. 106. 143, vol. 142, 152. 4, pp. 121- 158, 180. 148, vol. Ze 143, vol. 208. 143, vol. 320. 143, vol. 297. 143, vol. 254. 143, vol. 269. 143, vol. W235. 143, vol. 198. 143, vol. 3, pp.2213- 243. 143, vol. 3, pp. 199- 202. 3, pp. 209- 3, pp. 203- 3, pp. 307- 3, pp. 283- 3, pp. 245- 3, pp. 255- 3, pp. 713- 3, pp. 193- 1 (pt. 2), 285. 10. 124. 144. 118. 88 North Carolina: Peachtree Mound and village site (Setzler and Jennings). Peachtree Site, Skeletal material from (Stewart) _---- North Chilean Coast, The cultural sequence of the (Bird) - North Chilean Coast, The historic inhabitants of the (Bird) North Colombia Lowlands, Tribes of the (Hernandez de Alba). Northern and Central Nootkan tribes, The (Drucker) ---- Northern Highland tribes, The: The Lenca (Stone) -- -- -- Northern! Ute musici(Densmore) soos e see eee eee Northwest Coast, Archeological survey on the northern (Drucker). Northwest, extreme, Tribes of the (Dall)_--.--.--------- Notes on Fox mortuary customs and beliefs (Michelson) - - Notes on the Buffalo-head dance of the Thunder gens of the Fox Indians (Michelson). Notes on the Fox society known as ‘‘Those who Worship the Little Spotted Buffalo” (Michelson). Notes on the Fox WApandwiweni (Michelson) ------ ----- Notes on the natives of Alaska (Furuhelm)___----------- Numbers, measures, weights, and calendars (Bennett) --_- Numbers; Primitive (MieGee)!--- 2 52- =. 222 2-2- === ace Numeral systems of Mexico and Central America (Thomas) Numerals, Note on the use of, among the T’sim si-an’ (Gibbs). Oberg, Kalervo: Indian tribes of northern Mato Grosso, Brazil, by Kalervo Oberg, with an appendix entitled “‘ Anthro- pometry of the Umotina, Nambicuara, and Iranxe, with comparative data from other northern Mato Grosso tribes,’”’ by Marshall T. Newman. Terena and Caduveo of southern Mato Grosso, The- - O’Bryan, Aileen. The Diné: Origin myths of the Navaho Indians. Observations on some nineteenth century pottery vessels from the Upper Missouri (Wedel). Observations on the Thunder dance of the Bear gens of the Fox Indians (Michelson). Ofo, Biloxi-, dictionary (Dorsey and Swanton)-_---------- Of the Crow Nation, by Edwin Thompson Denig (edited with biographical sketch and footnotes by John C. Ewers). Ohio, The circular, square, and octagonal earthworks of (Thomas). Ohio mounds, The problem of the (Thomas) - ----------- sep tos} = leeja fos] [se} (23) leek tes) we lee) Ine) BUREAU OF AMERICAN ETHNOLOGY 131. 131, 81. 143, vol. 2, pp. 587— 594. 143, vol. 2, pp. 595- 597. 143, vol. 4, pp. 329- 338. 144. 143, vol. 4, pp. 205- 217. 75. 133, Anthrop. Pap. No. 20. 1 Pe 40, 351. 87. 40, 497. 105. elute 143, vol. 5, pp. 601- 610. 19, 821. 19, 853. 1, 55. 15. 9. 163. 164, Anthrop. Pap. No. 51. 89. 47. 151, Anthrop. Pap. No. 33. 10. INDEX TO AUTHORS AND TITLES 89 Ojibwa, The Midé’wiwin or ‘“‘Grand Medicine Society” of A 7, 143. the (Hoffman). See also Chippewa. Olbrechts, Frans M. See Mooney, James, and Olbrechts. Omaha and Ponka letters (Dorsey) ...-......---_---_-- Omaha dwellings, furniture, and implements (Dorsey) -__-_- Pmt siclolzy+ (Orsey) 2222s 2 0) Se ec esse eee loss. Omaha tribe, The (Fletcher and La Flesche)___________- IRGC OCOONEI) ©" =o See eee a ee O’Neale, Lila M.: TSS CN A a a er ee Wesivan pane eee yee = Pd Mv SS Ay ens 2 2 en ole ot mo ee Oregon, northwestern, Tribes of (Gibbs)_______________- Oregon, southwestern, The Klamath Indians of (Gatschet) Orinoco River, The tribes north of the (Kirchhoff) ______ Ormond Beach Mound, East Central Florida (Jennings, Willey, and Newman). In press. Ortiz, Sergio Elias: The modern Quillacinga, Pasto, and Coaiquer___-___- The native tribes and languages of southwestern Colombia. Osage language, A dictionary of the (La Flesche)________ Qeare traditions (Dorsey) ...222. S22. ean. foie bee Osage tribe: Rite of the chiefs; saying of the ancient men, The (La Flesche). Rite of the Wa-xo’-be, The (La Flesche)____________ The mite ofivigi (La Flesche).-.. 2/20 2222222228. Two versions of the child-naming rite (La Flesche) _- War ceremony and peace ceremony of (La Flesche) __ Osborne, Douglas. Excavations in the McNary Reservoir Basin near Umatilla, Oregon. With appendixes by Marshall T. Newman, Arthur Woodward, W. J. Kroll, and B. H. McLeod. In press. Ospina, Gabriel, see Foster, George M. Otenine vibe (Kirchhoff) 422522. ese ps 2 BREE Owl sacred pack of the Fox Indians, The (Michelson) ___- Ozark region of central Missouri, Cave explorations in the (Fowke). Painting, face and body. See Teit, James A. Paiute, Panatiibiji’, and Owens Valley (Steward)________ Palerm, Angel, and Kelly, Isabel. The Tajin Totonac: Part 1. History, subsistence, shelter, and technology. Pampean Hunters, The Patagonian and (Cooper) __-_-_--_- Pamunkey Indians of Virginia (Pollard)_.___________-___ ili bs 13, 263. 3,205. oie 143, vol. 1, pp. 107- 125. 143, vol. 5, pp. 69-96. 143, vol. 5, pp. 97- 138. | si SY fe 24 143, vol. 4, pp. 481- 493. 164, Anthrop. Pap. No. 49. 143, vol. 2, pp. 961- 968. 143, vol. 2, pp. 911- 914. 109. 6, 373. 45, 523. 39, 31. 43, 23. 101. 166. 143, vol. 4, pp. 489- 444, as 76. 119, Anthrop. Pap. No. 6. 13. 143, vol. 1, pp. 127- 168. 17. 90 Panamé, The archeology of (Lothrop)___.____---------- Panamé Canal, The tribes west and south of the (Lothrop) - Panatiibiji’, an Owens Valley Paiute (Steward) -__-_------- iPancarardcChes(iowie) so. oe ee ee SE ee Papago musicu(Mensmore) esses eee oe ee eee Paran4 Delta and La Plata Littoral, Indians of the (Lothrop). Parand River, The archeology of the (Aparicio) __--__---- Paressi Phe (Métraux) e222 hee fo ee fae eee See Parintintin, and their neighbors, The Cawahib (Nimuen- daji). Park, Willard Z. Tribes of the Sierra-Nevada de Santa Marta. Parsons, Elsie Clews. Isleta, New Mexico___--__------- Pasto, and Coaiquer, The modern Quillacinga (Ortiz) -- -- Patagonia, The archeology of (Bird)___-_.-_____-------- Patagonian and Pampean Hunters, The (Cooper)_-----_- Patdngoro and Amanf, The (Kirchhoff)_______________-- Patashé linguistic families. See Mashacalf, Patashé, and Malalf linguistic families (Métraux and Nimuendajt). Pathological changes in South American Indian skeletal remains (Stewart). Pathology of Chile, The geographical (Herzog) _-___----- Pawnee archeology, An introduction to (Wedel) ----_----- Pawnee ceremony, The Hako: A (A. C. Fletcher) ___----- Pawneesmusic: (Densmore) =e ee eee Paya, and Jicaque, The Mosquito, Sumo. The Caribbean Lowland tribes: (Kirchhoff). Peachtree Mound and village site, Cherokee County, North Carolina (Setzler and Jennings). Peachtree Site, North Carolina, Skeletal material from (Stewart). Peban tribes, The (Steward and Métraux)_-_----------- Penny capitalism, a Guatemalan Indian economy (Tax) -- Perforated stones from California (Henshaw) -_--_.---_--- Perd: A culture sequence for the North Coast of (Larco Hoyle). Primitive trephining in ancient (Mufiz and McGee) -- Social and economico-political evolution of the com- munities of Central (Castro Pozo). Textile fabrics of ancient (Holmes)__---.-__-------- BUREAU OF AMERICAN ETHNOLOGY 143, vol. 4, pp. 143- 167. 143, vol. 4, pp. 253- 256. 119, Anthrop. Pap. No. 6. 143, vol. 1, p. 561. 90. 143, vol. 1, pp. 177- 190. 143, vol. 3, pp. 57- 67. 143, vol. 3, pp. 349- 360. 143, vol. 3, pp. 283- 297. 143, vol. 2, pp. 865- 886. 47, 193. 143, vol. 2, pp. 961- 968. 143, vol. 1, pp. 17- 24. 143, vol. 1, pp. 127- 168. 143, vol. 4, pp. 339- 348. 143, vol. 6, pp. 49- 52. 143, vol. 6, pp. 137- 144. 112. 22 (pt. 2), 5. 93. 143, vol. 4, pp. 219- 229. 131. 131, 81. 143, vol. 3, pp. 727- 736. 16. 2. 143, vol. 2, pp. 149- 175. 16, 3. 143, vol. 2, pp. 483-— 499. INDEX TO AUTHORS AND TITLES Peruvian civilization, The quipu and (Swanton) __- Petroglyphs (Rouse) __ =. ....._- -- ees uciaiy =. 4 nee Petrullo, Vincenzo: preheelopyolArangquin |=! elle pea heel! bow The Yaruros of the Capanaparo River, Venezuela ___- Philology, or the science of activities designed for ex- pression (Powell). Physical anthropology of the internal organs among the races of Chile (Henckel). Physical anthropology of the Lenape or Delawares, and of the eastern Indians in general (Hrdliéka). Physiography, The, of the Rio Grande Valley, New Mexico, in relation to Pueblo culture (Hewett, Henderson, and Robbins). Physiological and medical observations among Indians of southwestern United States and northern Mexico. (Hrdliéka). Pickwick Basin, Alabama, Skeletal material from (Newman and Snow). Pickwick Basin, An archeological survey of (Webb and DeJarnette). Pickwick Basin, Geology of (Jones).._.......---------- Pickwick Basin Landing in the Tennessee River Valley, Mollusks found in shell mounds of (Morrison). Pickwick pottery, A description and analysis of the (Haag) Pictographs of the North American Indians (Mallery) _-_-_- Picture-writing: Of the American Indians (Mallery)._..-...--------- Studies in Central American (Holden)______-____-_- Picuris children’s stories, with texts and songs (Harrington and Roberts). Pierson, Donald. Cruz das Almas: a Brazilian village___ Pigmentation and hair of South American Indians, The (Steggerda). Pilling, J. C.: Bibliography of the Algonquian languages____-_-_----- Bibliography of the Athapascan languages_-_------- Bibliography of the Chinookan languages__---_--_-- Bibliography of the Eskimo language_-_-_____-__---- Bibliography of the Iroquoian languages___________- Bibliography of the Muskhogean languages _----- - -- Bibliography of the Salishan languages__________-_-- Bibliography of the Siouan languages_____-_-_-------- Bibliography of the Wakashan languages----_----_-- Catalogue of linguistic manuscripts in the library of the Bureau of Ethnology. Proof-sheets of a bibliography of the languages of the North American Indians. Pimaindians, Che (Russell)- sees: Pace est lee) fee} toe] los) 91 133, Anthrop. Pap. No. 26. 143, vol. 5, pp. 493- 502. 123, Anthrop. Pap. No. 12. 123, Anthrop. Pap. No. 11. 20, CXXXIX. 143, vol. 6, pp. 145- 156. 62. 54. 34, 129, 393. 129. 129, 327. 129, 337. 129, 509. 4, 3. 10, 3. 1, 205. 43, 289. 12. 143, vol. 6, pp. 85- 90. 13. 14. 15. 92 Pipe, northern Arapaho flat, and the ceremony of covering the pipe (Carter). Pirahé, The Mura and (Nimuendajii)_-____------------ Plants, Uses of: By Indians of the Missouri River region (Gilmore) -- By the Chippewa Indians (Densmore)____.___-_-__- Plants, Yucatan, Some ethnological data concerning one hundred (Steggerda). Plants in tropical South America, The use of wild (Lévi- Strauss). Plants of South and Central America, Cultivated (Sauer) - Pleasure; Esthetology, or the science of activities designed to give (Powell). Roetiys, Zuni rituala(B une)! Sass eee eee eee Point Barrow expedition, Ethnological results of the (Murdoch). Political organization of the Andean peoples, The social and (Kirchhoff). Political organization of the Tropical Forest and Marginal tribes, Social and (Lowie). Pollard, J. G. The Pamunkey Indians of Virginia_____-- Ponka and Omaha letters (Dorsey)___.-__.__._--------- Popayaén region, Colombia, The archeology of the (Lehmann). Population of South America, The native (Steward) _____- Porto Rico and neighboring islands, Aborigines of (Fewkes) Potomac and James Valleys, Archeologic investigations in (Fowke). Potomac-Chesapeake tidewater province, Stone imple- ments of (Holmes). Pottery: Aboriginal, of the eastern United States (Holmes) - -- Ancient, of the Mississippi Valley (Holmes) -_-_--_-_-_- Designs on prehistoric Hopi (Fewkes)--___-_-_------ of the ancient Pueblos (Holmes)____________-__-_-- Prehistoric textile fabrics of the United States, derived from impressions on (Holmes). Pueblo, as illustrative of Zufi (Cushing). Vessels from the Upper Missouri, Observations on some nineteenth century (Wedel). Pourchet, Maria Julia. Brazilian Mestizo types.____-_-- culture-growth Powell, J. W.: Esthetology, or the science of activities designed to give pleasure. Indian linguistic families of America north of Mexico- Introduction to the study of Indian languages, with words, phrases, and sentences to be collected. B B => tes) tes} les) — BUREAU OF AMERICAN ETHNOLOGY 119, Anthrop, No. 12. 143, vol. 3, pp. 269. Pap. 255- 33, 43. 44, 275. 136, Anthrop. No. 29. 143, vol. 6, pp. 486. 143, vol. 6, pp. 486. 19, Ly. Pap. 465- 465- 47, 611. 9, 3} 143, vol. 5, pp. 340. 143, vol. 5, pp. 350. Ue 11. 143, vol. 2, pp. 864. 148, vol. 5, pp. 668. 25, 3. 23. 293- 313- 861- 655- 15, 3. 20, 3. 4, 361. 33, 208. 4, 257. 3, 393. 4, 467. 164, Anthrop. Pap. No. 51. 143, vol. 6, pp. 111- 120. 19, Lv. Geole 1 and 2. INDEX TO AUTHORS AND TITLES Powell, J. W.—Continued Map of linguistic stocks of American Indians north of Mexico. Onitactivatal sunilanitiess 222-5. Sa) shades ey 3 On limitations to the use of some anthropologic data__ Ontrerimentation: =. 52. tes eT oth, Onithevevolution of lanouage:-- 22-222 Philology, or the science of activities designed for expression. Sketch of the mythology of the North American In- dians. Sociology, or the science of institutions..___.____-__- Sophiology, or the science of activities designed to give instruction. Technology, or the science of industries_____________ Wyandot government: A short study of tribal society _ editor. Linguistics [of the tribes of California ]______ Powers, Stephen. Tribes of California_________________ Prehistoric island culture area of America, A (Fewkes) -- - Prehistoric settlement pattern in the Vir Valley, Peru (Willey). Prehistoric sites in the region of Flagstaff, Arizona, A survey of (Colton). Prehistoric trephining and cranial amulets (R. Fletcher) _- Prehistoric villages, castles, and towers of southwestern Colorado (Fewkes). Prehistory and the Missouri Valley development program: summary report on the Missouri River Basin archeo- logical survey in 1948 (Wedel). Prehistory and the Missouri Valley development program: summary report on the Missouri River Basin archeo- logical survey in 1949 (Wedel). Primitive man in Argentina, The present status of the theories concerning (Frenguelli). Primitive numbers.(M.cGee}s2o5. boa. Iuweerte-oio. jos ar Problem of the Ohio mounds, The (Thomas)-___________- Projectile points and large blades, An analysis of (Holland) Proof-sheets of a bibliography of the languages of the North American Indians (Pilling). Property among the Tropical Forest and Marginal tribes (Lowie). Psychological. determinants of culture change in an Iroquoian community, Some (Wallace). Publications of the Bureau of American Ethnology, List of - Pueblo architecture: Tusayan and Cibola (V. Mindeleff) __ Pueblo culture, The physiography of the Rio Grande Valley, New Mexico, in relation to (Hewett and others). Pueblo pottery as illustrative of Zufi culture growth (Cushing). Pueblo ruins, Early, in the Piedra district, southwestern Colorado (Roberts). Pueblo ruins, Two summers’ work in (Fewkes)_-..----_- M w Be a ea i 93 4, te 3, LXV. 1, ake 15, civ. pale 20, CXXXIX. 1, 17. 20, LIX. 20, CLXXI. 20, XxXIx. Woe 3, 439. 3. 34, 35. 155. 104. 5. 70. 154, 1-59. 154, 61-101. 143, vol. 6, pp. 11- 17. 19, 821. 8. 160, 165. De 143, vol. 5, pp. 351- 367. 149, 55-76. 24, 31, 36, 49, 58; A 17, 20, 28, 30. 8, 3. 54. 4, 467. 96. 22 (pt. 1), 3. 94. Pueblos, ancient, Pottery of the (Holmes)___-_____-____- Puerto Rico, The ethnography of (Hostos)_----_-______- Puna and the Quebrada de Humahuaca, The cultures of the (Casanova). Puri-Coroado linguistic family, The (Métraux)_________- Quarry, Ancient, in Indian Territory (Holmes) --_--_-_-_- Quebrada de Humahuaca, The cultures of the Puna and the (Casanova). Quechua in the Colonial world, The (Kubler) ._-----__-_- Quechua, The contemporary (Mishkin)________-__-_--_- Quichua-speaking Indians of the Province of Imbabura (Ecuador) and their anthropometric relations with the living populations of the Andean area (Gillin). Quileute music, Nootka and (Densmore)-_-_------------- Quillacinga, Pasto, and Coaiquer, The modern (Ortiz) -_-- Quipu and Peruvian civilization, The (Swanton) --------- Quiroga: a Mexican municipio (Brand) ----_------------- Races of Chile, The physical anthropology of the internal organs among the (Henckel). Radin, Paul. The Winnebago tribe______-________----- Randle, Martha Champion. See Fenton, William N., editor. Rands, Robert L.: Some manifestations of water in Mesoamerican art_-_ The water lily in Maya art: a complex of alleged Asiatic origin. Rau, Charles. Observations on cup-shaped and other lapidarian sculptures in the Old World and in America. Recording devices, Mnemonic and (Bennett)_----------- Regimentation: (Powell))ss2e_2! Gye noe Se eee Relacién of 1746, Sedelmayr’s (Ives)____--------------- Relationship, Terms of, used by the Innuit (Doll)_------- Religion, Ghost-dance (Mooney) -_---------------------- Religion and shamanism (Métraux)__-__-_.------------ Religion of Handsome Lake: Its origin and development (Deardorff) Religious beliefs and medical practices of the Creek Indians (S vanton). Religious beliefs and usages of the Chickasaw Indians, Social and (Swanton). Religious life of the Zuni child (M. C. Stevenson) -_-----_- Rembert mounds, Elbert County, Georgia, The (Caldwell) Co aa fe 8 je oe) BUREAU OF AMERICAN ETHNOLOGY A, 257. 143, vol. 4, pp. 542. 143, vol. 2, pp 631. 143, vol. 530. 21. 143, vol. 631. 143, vol. 410. 143, vol. 2, pp. 470. 128, Anthrop. No. 16. 124. 143, vol. 2, pp. 968. 133, Anthrop. No. 26. ie 143, vol. 6, pp. 156. 37, 35. 157, Anthrop. No. 48. 151, Anthrop. No. 34. 5. 143, vol. 5, pp. 619. 15, crv. 123, Anthrop. No. 9. May. 14, 641. 143, vol. 5, pp. 599. 149, 77-107. 42, 473. 44, 169. 5, 533. 154, 303-320. 1, pp. 2, pp. 2, pp. 540- .619- 523- 619- 331- 411- Pap. 961- Pap. 145- Pap. Pap. 611- Pap. 559- INDEX TO AUTHORS AND TITLES Revaluation of the Eastern Siouan problem, with particular emphasis on the Virginia branches—the Occaneechi, the Saponi, and the Tutelo (Miller). Jn press. Rice. See Wild rice. Riggs, Stephen Returns: Dakota-English dictionary, A____._-__------------ Dakota grammar, texts and ethnography-__-_--_--_-_--_- Illustration of the method of recording Indian languages. Rio Grande Valley, New Mexico, The physiography of the (Hewett, Henderson, and Robbins). Rio Negro Basin, The hunting and gathering tribes of the (Métraux). River Basin Surveys Papers: Robbins, Wilfred W., and others: Ethnobotany of the Tewa Indians_______________-- The physiography of the Rio Grande Valley, New Mexico. Roberts, Frank H. H., Jr. Archeological remains in the Whitewater District, eastern Arizona. Part I: House types. Archeological remains in the Whitewater District, eastern Arizona. Part II. Artifacts and burials. With appendix, Skeletal remains from the White- water District, eastern Arizona, by T. D. Stewart. Early Pueblo ruins in the Piedra district, southwestern Colorado. Shabik’eshchee village, a late Basket Maker site in the Chaco Canyon, New Mexico. The ruins at Kiatuthlanna, eastern Arizona___-_-__- The Village of the Great Kivas on the Zuni Reser- vation, New Mexico. Roberts, Helen H., Haeberlin, H. K., and Teit, James A. Coiled basketry in British Columbia and surrounding region. Roberts, Helen H. See Harrington, J. P., and Roberts, Helen H. Root, William C. Metallurgy.-_-......-.----------- oe Roth, Walter E.: Additional studies of the arts, crafts, and customs of the Guiana Indians, with special reference to those of southern British Guiana. An inquiry into the animism and folk-lore of the Guiana Indians. An introductory study of the arts, crafts, and customs of the Guiana Indians. Rouse, Irving: Retroglyphs.. 225-52) a. seesence se nk B 95 164, Anthrop. Pap. No. 52. 1, 579. 54. 143, vol. 3, pp. 861— 867. 154. 158. 166. 55. 54. 121. 126. 96. 92. 100. 111. 41, 119. 143, vol. 5, pp. 205- 225. 91. 30, 103. 38, 25. 143, vol. 5, pp. 493- 502. 96 Rouse, Irving —Continued The Arawalk**...._- 2 7a a ema arth? STs 7 er ALN OE Ny | ov aes ee he! Ciboney..-- <=6 = =e see The West Indies: An introduction Rowe, John Howland. Inca culture at the time of the Spanish Conquest. Royce, Charles C.: Cessions of lands by Indian tribes to the United States: Illustrated by those in the State of Indiana. Indian land cessions in the United States (with intro- duction by Thomas). The Cherokee nation of Indians: A narrative of their official relations with the Colonial and Federal governments. Rubber (Meétraux)ee222 s252 2525522225 ie BiJe Dale eee Ruin, Casa Grande (C. Mindeleff)____- : Ruin, Casa Grande, Repair of, in 1891 (C. Mindeleff) __ me 8 See also Twenty-eighth Annual Report. Ruins: at Kiatuthlanna, eastern Arizona (Roberts) _____ Ghee Cliff, of Canyon de Chelly (C. Mindeleff)_..._____ ie Early Pueblo, in the Piedra district, southwestern Colorado (Roberts). pueblo, Two summers’ work in (Fewkes)__------__ _- Russell, Frank. The Pima Indians____________________ Sacred formulas and medicinal prescriptions, Cherokee, The Swimmer manuscript: (Mooney and Olbrechts). Sacred formulas of the Cherokees (Mooney) _____-______- Sacred pack, What happened to Green Bear who was blessed with a (Michelson). Sacred pack of the Fox Indians, The Owl (Michelson) ____ Sae, The Guayupé and (Kirchhoff)_--_---___________ Salishan languages, Bibliography of the (Pilling)_______ _ Salishan tribes of the western plateaus, The (Teit)_.___ _ _ Salt River, upper Gila and, valleys, Antiquities of the (Hough). Sambaquis of the Brazilian coast, The (Serrano)________ San Agustin and Tierradentro, Colombia, The archeology of (Hernandez de Alba). Sand painting of the Navajo Indians, Mythical (J. Stevenson). Sapir, Edward. See Bulletin 40 (pt. 2). B B BUREAU OF AMERICAN ETHNOLOGY 143, vol. 4, pp. 507— 546. 143, vol. 4, pp. 547- 565. 143, vol. 4, pp. 497- 503. 143, vol. 4, pp. 495- 496. 143, vol. 2, pp. 183- 330. 1, 247. 18, 521. 5, 121. 143, vol. 5, pp. 227- 228. 13, 289. 15, 315. 100. 16, 73. 96. 22 (pt. 1), 3 26, 3. 99. 7, 301. 119, Anthrop. Pap. No. 4. (P+ 143, vol. 4, pp. 385- 391. 16. 45, 23. 35. 143, vol. 1, pp. 401- 407. 143, vol. 2, pp. 851- 859. 8, 229. INDEX TO AUTHORS AND TITLES Sapper, Carl, and others. Mexican and Central American antiquities, calendar systems, and history. Sauer, Carl O.: Cultivated plants of Central and South America____- The geography of South America__________-_------ Schellhas, Paul, and others. Mexican and Central Amer- ican antiquities, calendar systems, and history. Schoolcraft, Index to Indian tribes of the United States, compiled by Frances 8. Nichols. Sculptures, cup-shaped and other lapidarian, Observations on (Rau). Sedelmayr’s Relacién of 1746 (Ives)_________-_--------- Seler, Eduard, and others. Mexican and Central Amer- ican antiquities, calendar systems, and history. Seminole Indians of Florida, The (MacCauley)-_--------- Seminole music (Densmore). Jn press_____-_---------- Seneca fiction, legends, and myths, collected by Jeremiah Curtin and J. N. B. Hewitt (edited by J. N. B. Hewitt). Serian and Yuman languages. See Comparative lexicology of (Hewitt). Seriimomnss-phe (McGee). =... 2 er we ee Serrano, Antonio: Sambaqufs of the Brazilian coast__..__________----- mhey@harriiaette. fa. Se oe et SS ¥ Setzler, Frank M., and Jennings, Jesse D. Peachtree Mound and village site, Cherokee County, North Carolina. Shabik’eshchee village, a late Basket Maker site in the Chaco Canyon, New Mexico (Roberts). Shamanism, Religion and (Métraux)__________________- Shell, Art in, of the ancient Americans (Holmes) -_________ Shepard, Anna O. See Drucker, Philip. Shimkin, D. B. The Wind River Shoshone Sun Dance__- Shoshoni, Lemhi, physical therapy (Steward) ---_-_------- Shoshoni, myths, Some western (Steward)_____________- Hine PnOlNEn . SteVeNsON) 2-226 oa eee ek ok oss Sierra Nevada de Santa Marta, Colombia, Tribes of the (Park). Sierra Popoluca speech (Foster and Foster) ------------- Sierras de Cérdoba, The Comechingén and their neighbors of the (Aparicio). Signals, gesture-signs and, of the North American Indians (Mallery). B eo) a eee los) ee 97 28. 143, vol. 6, pp. 465- 486. 148, vol. 6, pp. 319- 344. 28. 123, Anthrop. Pap. No. 9. 28. 5, 469. 161. 32, 37. 17, 299*. 17, 1. 143, vol. 1, pp. 401- 407. 143, vol. 1, pp. 191- 196. 131. 92. 143, vol. 5, pp. 559- 599. 25,109: 151, Anthrop. Pap. No. 41. 119, Anthrop. Pap. No. 5. 136, Anthrop. Pap. No. 31. 11, 3. 143, vol. 2, pp. 865- 886. 8. 143, vol. 2, pp. 673- 685. Is 98 BUREAU OF AMERICAN ETHNOLOGY Sign language: among North American Indians (Mallery)____-__-_- Introduction to the study of, among North American Indians (Mallery). Silversmiths, Navajo (Matthews)_________------------- Similarities, On activital (Powell)_....________--_--___- Siouan, Algonquian, and Caddoan tribes west of the Mississippi, Burials of the (Bushnell). Siouan, Algonquian, and Caddoan tribes west of the Mississippi, Villages of the (Bushnell). Siouan(cults, Avstudy of (Dorsey)_.__-...---.-- > sa222 Siouanyindians) Che (McGee) 222s 2a es a ae ae alee Siouan languages, Bibliography of the (Pilling)_-___-_- _- See also Bulletin 40 (pt. 1). See also Dakota. Siouan sociology @orsey )_<-!45- _aasne) fe peeree L Siouan tribes of the east (Mooney) ___---__-_------------ Sioux music. See Teton Sioux. Sioux outbreak of-f890" (Mooney) .....--__. = =5_ 3. -- = Sirion6) Lhe (Eolmberg) =. 325 ey Dee ee eee Skeletal material from Missouri mounds (Hrdliéka)_____- Skeletal material from Pickwick Basin, Alabama, Pre- liminary report on (Newman and Snow). Skeletal remains, Anthropometry of South American Indian (Stewart and Newman). Skeletal remains, Deformity, trephining, and mutilation in South American Indian (Stewart). Skeletal remains, Pathological changes in South American Indian (Stewart). Skeletal remains from the Buena Vista sites, California Skeletal remains from the Peachtree Site, North Carolina (Stewart). Skeletal remains from the Whitewater District, eastern Arizona (Stewart). Skeletal remains suggesting or attributed to early man in North America (Hrdliéka). See also Bulletin 66. Skulls from British Honduras, Report on two (Cave). In Anthrop. Pap. No. 7, Bulletin 123. Smith, Erminnie A. Myths of the Iroquois__________-_-- Snake and Flute ceremonies, Tusayan (Fewkes)________- Snake ceremonies, Tusayan (Fewkes)-_.----_----------- Snow, Charles E. See Newman, Marshall T., and Snow, Charles E. Snyderman, George S. See Fenton, William N., editor. Social and ceremonial life of the Choctaw Indians, Source material for the (Swanton). Social and economico-political evolution of the com- munities of Central Peri (Castro Pozo). Social and political organization of the Andean peoples, The (Kirchhoff). ee} fee} Nesiilesl <9 tee} [ee == fos) feel las] 1, 263. 3. 745 Ml 3) LXV. 83. 77. 15, 205. 22. 14, 641. 143, vol. 3, pp. 454- 463. 37, 103. 129, 393. 143, vol. 6, pp. 19- 42. 143, vol. 6, pp. 43- 47. 143, vol. 6, pp. 49- 52. 130, 172. 131, 81. 126, 153. 33. 2, 47. 19, 957. 16, 267. 103. 143, vol. 2, pp. 483- 499, 143, vol. 5, pp. 293- 311. INDEX TO AUTHORS AND TITLES Social and political organization of the Tropical Forest and Marginal tribes (Lowie). Social and religious beliefs and usages of the Chickasaw Indians (Swanton). Social organization and social usages of the Indians of the Creek Confederacy (Swanton). Sociology Omaha (Dorsey) aos sees ose ces anes esas Sociology, or the science of institutions (Powell)_________ Sociologya siouany (Dorsey) = eon ae eee eee eee Sociopolitical groups, Basin-plateau aboriginal (Steward) __ Solecki, Ralph S. Exploration of an Adena Mound at Natrium, West Virginia. Some manifestations of water in Mesoamerican art (Rands) Songs: Hawaiian. See Bulletin 38. Ojibway. See Hoffman, 7th Annual Report. Osage. See La Flesche, Bulletin 101. Pawnee. See Fletcher, 22d Annual Report. Picuris children’s stories with texts and (Harrington and Roberts). Search for, among Chitimacha Indians in Louisiana (Densmore). See also Music. Sophiology, or the science of activities designed to give instruction (Powell). South America: Antiquity of man in’ (McCown) -2-22-22022'f2 222.22. Early man in (Hrdlitka and others)______.________- Fauna and ethnozoology of (Gilmore)_____________- Miestizosioi(Sterzerda) Bees == aae a = See es sBhespeography ole (Sauler)—2 222 Fe eee st The native population of (Steward)________________ tropical, The use of wild plants in (Lévi-Strauss) ____ See also Ecuador, Guiana Indians, Tierra del Fuego, and other countries of South America. South American cultures: An interpretative summary (Steward). South and Central America, Cultivated plants of (Sauer) South Carolina: Beaufort, Ceramic remains from two sites near (Griffin). Beaufort County, Some notes on a few sites in (Flannery). Southeastern United States, The Indians of the (Swanton) _ Southern Hunters, The: An introduction (Cooper) ----_--- DOP PS ee} les} lee} ee, 99 143, vol. 5, pp. 313- 350. 44, 169. 42, 23. 3, 205. 20, LIx. 15, 205. 120. 151, Anthrop. Pap. 40. 157, Anthrop. Pap. No. 48. 43, 289. 133, Anthrop. Pap. No. 19. CLXXI. 143, vol. 52. 143, vol. 464. 143, vol. 109. 143, vol. 344. 143, vol. 666. 143, vol. 486. 143. 6, pp. 1-9. 6, pp. 345- 6, pp. 105- 6, pp. 319- 5, pp. 655- 6, pp. 465- 143, vol. 772. 143, vol. 6, pp. 487- 543. 5, pp. 669- 133, Anthrop. Pap. No. 22. 133, Anthrop. Pap. No. 21. 137. 143, vol. 1, pp. 13- 15. 100 Spanish Conquest, Inca culture at the time of the (Rowe) - Speck, Frank G.: Art processes in birchbark of the River Desert Algon- quin, a circumboreal trait. Native tribes and dialects of Connecticut: A Mohegan- Pequot diary. Wawenock myth texts from Maine_______________-- Spruce-tree House, Mesa Verde National Park (Fewkes) -- Steedman, Elsie Viault, editor. Ethnobotany of the Thompson Indians of British Columbia, based on field notes by James A. Teit. Steggerda, Morris: A description of thirty towns in Yucatan, Mexico____ Anthropometry of South American Indians________ __ Mestizos of South America__.---_-___ 202592 - Some ethnological data concerning one hundred Yucatan plants. The pigmentation and hair of South American Indians Stevenson, James: Ceremonial of Hasjelti Dailjis and mythical sand painting of the Navajo Indians. Illustrated catalogue of collections obtained from the Indians of New Mexico and Arizona in 1879. Illustrated catalogue of collections obtained from the Indians of New Mexico in 1880. Illustrated catalogue of collections obtained from pueblos of Zuni, New Mexico, and Wolpi, Arizona, in 1881. Stevenson, Matilda Coxe: Ethnobotany of the Zui Indians___-_-__-. The religious life of the Zui child_________________ SRHeV Sige seeertes cies Be. Dee tewe The Zuni indians, their mythology, esoteric frater- nities, and ceremonies. Stevenson, Tilly E. See Stevenson, Matilda C. Steward, Julian H.: Ancient caves of the Great Salt Lake region _______- Archeological reconnaissance of southern Utah ______ Basin-plateau aboriginal sociopolitical groups________ Culture areas of the Tropical Forests___-_______- Lemhi Shoshoni physical therapy_- bghaciteves Panatiibiji’, an Owens Valley Paiute Some western Shoshoni myths____- B Po Pe ae BUREAU OF AMERICAN ETHNOLOGY 143, vol. 2, pp. 183- 330. 128, Anthrop. Pap. No. 17. 43, 199. 43, 165. 41. 45, 441. 136, Anthrop. Pap. No. 30. 143, vol. 6, pp. 57- 69. 143, vol. 6, pp. 105- 109. 136, Anthrop. Pap. No. 29. 143, vol. 6, pp. 85- 90. 8, 229. 2, 307. 2, 423. 3, 511. 30, 31. 5, 533. 11, 3. 23, 3. 116. 128, Anthrop. Pap. No. 18. 120. 143, vol. 3, pp. 883- 899. 119, Anthrop. Pap. No. 5. 119, Anthrop. Pap. No. 6. 136, Anthrop. Pap. No. 31. INDEX TO AUTHORS AND TITLES Steward, Julian H.—Continued South American cultures: An interpretative summary - The Circum-Caribbean tribes: An introduction. _____ The native population of South America__-__- Wi WhhepWatotoanstribeg iss 2.2 =. en Pa ES oh a Se. Tribes of the Montana: An introduction___ Western Tuconoan tribes_______ eS ee ee ee editor. Handbook of South American Indians. Vol. 1. The Marginal tribes. Vol. 2. The Andean civilizations. Vol. 3. The Tropical Forest tribes. Vol. 4. The Circum-Caribbean tribes. Vol. 5. The Comparative ethnology of South American Indians. Vol. 6. Physical anthropology, linguis- tics, and cultural geography of South American Indians. and Métraux, Alfred. The Peban tribes___________ Tribes of the Peruvian and Ecuadorian Montafia____ Stewart, T. D.: Deformity, trephining, and mutilation in South Amer- ican Indian skeletal remains. Pathological changes in South American Indian skel- etal remains. Skeletal remains from the Buena Vista sites, California (appendix). Skeletal remains from the Peachtree Site, North Carolina (appendix). Skeletal remains from the Whitewater District, eastern Arizona (appendix). and Newman, Marshall T. Anthropometry of South American Indian skeletal remains. Stimulants and narcotics (Cooper)_.._-_.___________. sgupres Stirling, M. W.: Archeological reconnaissance of Tabasco and Cam- peche. Jn press. Historical and ethnographical material on the Jivaro Indians. Origin myth of Acoma and other records_________ __- Stone monuments of southern Mexico______________ Stone monuments of the Rio Chiquito, Veracruz, Mexico. Stone, Doris: The basic cultures of Central America___________ ___ The Northern Highland tribes: The Lenca__________ les} les} tee} les} lee) les} feof tech les tue} to 101 143, vol. 5, pp. 669- 772. 143, vol. 4, pp. 1-41. 143, vol. 5, pp. 655- 668. 143, vol. 3, pp. 749- 762. 143, vol. 3, pp. 507- 533. 143, vol. 3, pp. 737- 748. 143. 143, vol. 3, pp. 727- 736. 143, vol. 3, pp. 535- 656. 143, vol. 6, pp. 43- 48. 143, vol. 6, pp. 49- 52. 130, 172. 131, 81. 126, 153. 143, vol. 6, pp. 19- 42. 143, vol. 5, pp. 525- 558. 164, Anthrop. Pap. 135. 138. 157, Anthrop. Pap. No. 43. 143, vol. 4, pp. 169- 193. 143, vol. 4, pp. 205- PAW 102 BUREAU OF AMERICAN ETHNOLOGY Stone art’ (Fowke) 2222. 22252625. 2 8 Suse. te eee Stone implements of the Potomac-Chesapeake tidewater province (Holmes). Stone monuments of southern Mexico (Stirling) ---------- Stone monuments of the Rio Chiquito, Veracruz, Mexico (Stirling). Stones, Perforated, from California (Henshaw) ---------- Stout, David B.: The Choc6sc toot 2h. S82. Se A eee Thei@unas eo sete. Ae eae ee Se eee Strachey vocabulary, The original, of the Virginia Indian language (Harrington). Strong, Duncan: The archeology of Central America: An introduction _ - The archeology of Costa Rica and Nicaragua ------ The archeology of Honduras--_-------------------- and Johnson, Frederick. Anthropological needs and possibilities in Central America. Structural investigations in 1943 (La Venta, Tabasco) (Wedel). Structures, Religious (Bennett) -----_------------------ Studies in Central American picture writing (Holden) --- - Study, An introductory, of the arts, crafts, and customs of the Guiana Indians (Roth). Study of Pueblo architecture, A (V. Mindeleff) ---------- Study of Siouan cults, A (Dorsey) - -------------------- Study of the manuscript Troano, A (Thomas) ----------- Sub-Andean tribes of the Cauca Valley (Herndndez de Alba). Suicide, Iroquois: A study in the stability of a culture pattern (Fenton). Sumo, Paya, and Jicaque, The Mosquito. The Caribbean Lowland tribes: (Kirchhoff). Sumu Indians. See Miskito and Sumu Indians. Sun Dance of the Northern Ute, The (Jones) ----------~-- Swanton, John R.: Aboriginal culture of the Southeast_-....----------- Early history of the Creek Indians and their neighbors Haida: texts’andimy ths2e=s= 2-522 s2"-2222—--—=eae Indian tribes of North America, The-_-------------- Indian tribes of the lower Mississippi Valley and adjacent coast of the Gulf of Mexico. Linguistic material from the tribes of southern Texas and northeastern Mexico. Myths and tales of the Southeastern Indians___-_-__- 13, 47. 15, 3. 138. 157, Anthrop. Pap. No. 43. 2. 143, vol. 4, pp. 269- 276. 143, vol. 4, pp. 257- 268. 157, Anthrop. Pap. No. 46. 143, vol. 4, pp. 69- 70. 143, vol. 4, pp. 121- 142. 143, vol. 4, pp. 71- 120. 143, vol. 4, pp. 293- 296. 153, 34-79. 143, vol. 5, pp. 29- 51. 1, 205. 38, 25. 8, 3. 11, 351. 5. 143, vol. 4, pp. 297- 327. 128, Anthrop. Pap. No. 14. 143, vol. 4, pp. 219- 229. 157, Anthrop. Pap. No. 47. 42, 673. 73. 29. 145. 43. 127. 88. Swanton, John R.—Continued INDEX TO AUTHORS AND TITLES Religious beliefs and medical practices of the Creek Indians. Social and religious beliefs and usages of the Chicka- saw Indians. Social organization and social usages of the Indians of the Creek Confederacy. Source material for the social and ceremonial life of the Choctaw Indians. Source material on the history and ethnology of the Caddo Indians. Structural and lexical comparison of the Tunica, Chitimacha, and Atakapa languages, A. The Indians of the Southeastern United States______ The quipu and Peruvian civilization Tlingit Indians, The Tlingit myths and texts and Dorsey, James Owen. Biloxi-Ofo dictionary ___ and Gatschet, Albert S. A dictionary of the Atakapa and Thomas, Cyrus. editor. editor. See also Bulletin 40 (pt. 1). language. Central America. Indian languages of Mexico and Choctaw dictionary (Byington)____________- Notes on the Creek Indians (Hewitt) ______- Swimmer manuscript, The: Cherokee sacred formulas and medicinal prescriptions (Mooney and Olbrechts). Symbols, Day, of the Maya year (Thomas) Symposium on local diversity in Iroquois culture (edited by William N. Fenton). Synonymy, Skittagetan (Henshaw) Taino. The ethnography of Hispaniola Tajin Totonac, The: Part 1. History, subsistence, shel- ter, and technology (Kelly and Palerm). Talamanca Division, The. The Caribbean Lowland tribes: (Johnson). Tales of Cochiti Indians (Benedict) Taos Pueblo, New Mexico, Factionalism at (Fenton). In press. Tapanyuna, and Apiac4, The Cayabi, (Nimuendajii)-_____ Tapirape, The (Wagley and Galvao) “Tapuya,” The (Lowie) Tarairiu, The (Lowie) Tattooing and face and body painting of the Thompson Indians, British Columbia (Teit). wale lee] Meej SP color] 42, 473. 44, 169. 42, 23. 103. 132. 68. 137. 133, Anthrop. No. 26. 26, 391. 39. 47. 108. 44, 46. 123, Anthrop. No. 10. 99. 143, vol. 4, pp. 539. 13. 143, vol. 4, pp. 251. 98. 164, Anthrop. No. 56. 143, vol. 3, pp. 320. 143, vol. 3, pp. 178. 143, vol. 1, pp. 556. 143, vol. 1, pp. 556. 45, 397. 103 Pap. Pap. 522- 231- Pap. 307- 167- 553- 553- 104 Tax, Sol. economy. Taylor, Douglas. Penny capitalism, a Guatemalan Indian The Caribs of Dominica.__--_--______ Technique in the music of the American Indian (Densmore) Technological analyses (La Venta, Tabasco) (Shepard) __- Technology, or the science of industries (Powell) _______- Teit, James A.: Tattooing and face and body painting of the Thomp- son Indians, British Columbia (edited by Franz Boas). The Salishan tribes of the western plateaus (edited by Franz Boas). With Haeberlin, H. K., and Roberts, Helen H. Coiled basketry in British Columbia and_ surrounding region. See also Steedman, Elsie Viault. Tenetehara, The (Wagley and Galvao)..- ---- === Tennessee: Archeological survey of Pickwick Basin in (Webb and DeJarnette). eastern, An archeological survey of the Norris Basin in (Webb). Middle, Two prehistoric villages in (Myer). _----—_- Pickwick Basin, Geology of the (Jones)____________- River in northern Alabama, An archeological survey of Wheeler Basin on the (Webb). Meremembéwthen(Métraux) 224-5555 eee eee Terena and Caduveo of southern Mato Grosso, Brazil (Oberg). Teton Sioux music (Densmore)____________- $Y jor Ome Tewa Indians: Ethnobotany of the (Robbins, Harrington, and Freire- Marreco). Ethnogeography of the (Harrington)._____________- Ethnozoology of the (Henderson and Harrington) _-__ Texas, southern, Linguistic material from the tribes of (Swanton). Textile art: Form and ornament in (Holmes)____________- Prehistoric, of eastern United States (eles Textile fabrics: offancient Rerug(Holmes)=—=- 2-5 25255 -e ene Prehistoric, of the United States (iiclmies) ieee ie Texts: Alsea (Frachtenberg)________- Biloxi (Dorsey and Swanton)_ Chinook (Boas) _-_- ead : Dakota (Riggs) ___- i Haida (Swanton)_ iP B B B A A > BUREAU OF AMERICAN ETHNOLOGY 16. 119, Anthrop. Pap. No. 3. 151, Anthrop. Pap. No. 36 153, 234-240. 20, XxIx. 45, 397. 45, 23. 41, 119. 143, vol. 3, pp. 1387- 148. 129. 118. Al, 485. 129, 327. 122. 143, vol. 1, pp. 573- 574. 9. 61. INDEX TO AUTHORS AND TITLES Texts—Continued Wathlamet(Boas\ae ease 2 eee le Kutenai (Boas and Chamberlain) _________________- Picuris (Harrington and Roberts)_________._______- pblingiba(O Wanton) Aes ee 8 Tsimshian (Boas) ___- ee gee ohare o aparanag so 0 a Wawenock (Speck)-_____- = ee Yo, oe es Thalbitzer, William. See Bulletin 40 (pt. 1). Therapy, physical, Lemhi Shoshoni (Steward)----_______ Thomas, Cyrus: A study of the manuscript Troano_-.-__-___________- Aids to the study of the Maya cordices__________ Burial mounds of northern sections of the United States. Catalogue of prehistoric works east of the Rocky Mountains. Day symbols of the Maya year___---__________ A Introduction to ‘Indian land cessions”’ (Royce) _____ Mayan calendar systems._._._.-.-..-.-.___.-.- a Notes on certain Maya and Mexican manuscripts. __- Numeral systems of Mexico and Central America __ Report on the mound explorations of the Bureau of Ethnology. The circular, square, and octagonal earthworks of Ohio. LODE IMENTS HED e Regi at ar Lee le are The problem of the Ohio mounds.--_-___-_____ _____- Work in mound exploration of the Bureau of Eth- nology. and Swanton, John R., Indian languages of Mexico and Central America and their geographical dis- tribution. Thompson Indians: British Columbia, Tattooing and face and body painting of the (Teit). of British Columbia, Ethnobotany of the (Steedman) _ Tierra del Fuego, Bibliography of tribes of (Cooper) _-_-__- Tierradentro, Colombia, The archeology of San Agustin and (Herndndez de Alba). Lhneit.lndians, Che: (Swanton) _...-....._..-._.-...- 2 Tlingit language. See Bulletin 40 (pt. 1). Tlingit myths and texts (Swanton)____-________- . Tobacco among the Karuk Indians of Galfoenty (Har rington). Tocantins River region, Little-known tribes of the (Nim- uendajti). Tonawanda longhouse ceremonies: Ninety years after Lewis Henry Morgan (Fenton). Towers of southwestern Colorado, Prehistoric villages, castles, and (Fewkes). Tozzer, Alfred M. Excavation of a site at Santiago Ahuitzotla, D. F. Mexico. B DBD WBwB FF WP 105 12. 16, 199. 18, 521. 19, 693, and 22 (pt. 1), 19% 3, 3. 19, 853. 12, 3. 10. 18. 4. 44, 45, 397. 45, 441. 63. 143, vol. 2, pp. 851- 859. 26, 391. 39. 94. 143, vol. 3, pp. 203- 208. 128, Anthrop. Pap. No. 15. 70. 74. 106 Tracy, Edwin S. See Annual Report 22, pt. 2, p. 5. Traditional origin of the Fox society known as “The Singing Around Rite’’ (Michelson). Traditions: Osage (Dorsey) S242 S22 ce soe se Ss se eee Tusayan migration (Fewkes)_......=----.---==---=- Trails, Indian, of the Southeast (Myer)-__-------------- ‘Draps: (Cooper): a ase Ol eee 2 ee ee Trephining, and mutilation in South American Indian skeletal remains, Deformity (Stewart). Trephining, Prehistoric, and cranial amulets (R. Fletcher) Trephining, Primitive, in Peru (Mufiz and McGee)_--__-- Tres Zapotes, Mexico, Ceramic sequences at (Drucker) _-- Tres Zapotes, Mexico, Ceramics of (Weiant)__________-- Tribal society, Wyandot government: A short study of (Powell). Tribes, certain Indian, of the United States, Tuberculosis among (Hrdlicka). Tribes, Indian, of the Upper Missouri (Denig) -_--------- Tribes and languages of southwestern Colombia, The native (Ortiz). Tribes north of the Orinoco River, The (Kirchhoff) ____-- ribes of (Californiat(Powers)e-22- 2282. a eee Tribes of eastern Bolivia and the Madeira Headwaters (Métraux). Tribes of eastern Bolivia and western Matto Grosso, The native (Métraux). Tribes of Ecuador, The historic (Murra)_--___--_------- Tribes of North America, with synonymy. Skittagetan family (Henshaw). Tribes of northwestern Venezuela, The (Herndndez de Alba). Tribes of southern Colombia, The Highland (Herndndez de Alba). Tribes of the eastern slopes of the Bolivian Andes (Métraux). Tribes of the extreme northwest (Dall)..______._-_____- Tribes ofthe Guianas(@illin)==-_ = ee Tribes of the Jurué-Purtis Basins (Métraux)_____.______- Tribes of the lower Amazon, Little-known (Nimuendajii)_ Tribes of the lower and middle Xingé River (Nimuendaj&) - Tribes of the lower Mississippi Valley and adjacent coast of the Gulf of Mexico (Swanton). Tribes of the lower Tocantins River region, Little-known (Nimuendajii). ee) ee lee) ee oo] ies} = os} BUREAU OF AMERICAN ETHNOLOGY 40, 541. 6, 373. 19, 573. 42, 127: 143, vol. 5, pp. 265- 276. 143, vol. 6, pp. 43- 47. 5. 16, 3. 140. 139. 1,57: 42. 46, 375. 143, vol. 914. 143, vol. 493. 2, pp. 911- 4, pp. 481- 3. 143, vol. 454. 134. 3, pp. 381- 143, vol. 785- 821. 5. 2, pp. 148, vol. 469- 474. 143, vol. 961. 143, vol. 506. sa 143, vol. 860. 143, vol. 686. 143, vol. 211. 143, vol. 243. 43. 4, pp. 2, pp. 915- 3, pp. 465- 3, pp. 799- 3, pp. 657- 3, pp. 209- 3, pp. 213- 143, vol. 203- 208. 3, pp. INDEX TO AUTHORS AND TITLES Tribes of the middle and upper Amazon River (Métraux)_ Tribes of the Montafia: An introduction (Steward)_______ Tribes of the North Colombia Lowlands (Herndndez de Alba). Tribes of the Peruvian and Ecuadorian Montafia (Steward) Tribes of the right bank of the Guaporé River (Lévi- Strauss). Tribes of the Rio Negro Basin, The hunting and gathering (Métraux). Tribes of the Sierra Nevada de Santa Marta, Colombia (Park). Tribes of the Uaupés-Caqueté region (Goldman) -_-___-____- Tribes of the upper Xingt River (Lévi-Strauss) __-____-_- Tribes of western Washington and northwestern Oregon (Gibbs). Tribes west and south of the Panaméd Canal, The (Lothrop) Troano manuscript, A study of the (Thomas) -_---------- Tropical Forest and Marginal tribes, Property among the (Lowie). Tropical Forest and Marginal tribes, Social and political organization of the (Lowie). Tropical Forests, Culture areas of the (Steward) _-__----_- Tropical Forests, The: An introduction (Lowie)_--------- Troyville mounds, The, Catahoula Parish, La. (Walker) -- Trumbull, James Hammond. Natick dictionary __------ Tschopik, Harry, Jr.: PANU ORAS AMEN 3 2 te ie eet eee Sa, ee Ln es Highland communities of central Peru__-_____------ Tsimshian language. See Bulletin 40 (pt. 1). iemshianumy thology (Boas). ..5..... 0... .--22------ Eisimanianetexten (Oasis eee een eee ee eae T’sim si-an’, Note on the use of numerals among the (Gibbs). Tuberculosis among certain Indian tribes of the United States (Hrdliéka). Tucanoan tribes, Western (Steward). __._______.__--- ‘ucuna, The(Nimuendajd).22.02 402.2. seen. Tunica language. See Bulletin 68. Tup{-Cawahib, The (Lévi-Strauss)._....______- Tupinamba, The (Métraux)_____- Reyes mains FE RIAL sai CRs gre! B B Bo Bo we We wo 107 143, vol. 3, pp. 687- a2: 143, vol. 3, pp. 533. 143, vol. 4, pp. 338. 143, vol. 3, pp. 656. 143, vol. 3, pp. 379. 143, vol. 3, pp. 867. 143, vol. 2, pp. 886. 143, vol. 3, pp. 798. 143, vol. 3, pp. 348. 1, 157. 507- 329- 535- 371- 861- 865- 763— 321- 143, vol. 4, pp. 253- 256. 5. 143, vol. 5, pp. 367. 143, vol. 5, pp. 350. 143, vol. 3, pp. 899. 143, vol. 3, pp. 1-56. 113. Pais 351- 313- 883- 143, vol. 2, pp. 501- 573. 143, vol. 3, pp. 737- 748. 143, vol. 3, pp. 713- (25. 143, vol. 3, pp. 299- 305. 143, vol. 3, pp. 95- 133. 108 Turiwara and Arua, The (Nimuendaji)___._.-___-_.-_-- Turner, Lucien M. Ethnology of the Ungava Hudson Bay Territory. Tusayan clans, Localization of (C. Mindeleff)________- ae Tusayan Flute and Snake ceremonies (Fewkes)..--__ _- _- ‘Dusayan' katcinas!(Hewkes)=-22--- 0-0-2 Meee = oe Tusayan migration tradition (Fewkes)_....--. --§____ _- Tusayan Snake ceremonies (Fewkes)_.---_____________- Two prehistoric villages in Middle Tennessee (Myer) __--_ Two rock shelters near Tucumcari, New Mexico (Dick) -- Two summers’ work in pueblo ruins (Fewkes)-____--__ __- Uapés-Caqueté region, Tribes of the (Goldman)____-__ _- Ungava district, Ethnology of the (Turner).__._-______- Upper lakes, Wild-rice gatherers of the (Jenks)_________- Uru-Chipaya, The (La Barre)_.-_______________. res. see Use of wild plants in tropical South America (Lévi- Strauss). Uses of plants by the Chippewa Indians (Densmore) --- -- Uses of plants by the Indians of the Missouri River region (Gilmore). Utah, southern, Archeological reconnaissance of (Steward) - Ute music, Northern (Densmore)__.___________________- Valcarcel, Luis E.: Cuzco archeology 2) ree Wh ad sere phen Indian markets and fairs in Perf__--------________- Miche sAndeanecal enc aise see ye ee Valladolid Maya enumeration (Harrington). In press___- Venezuela: The archeology of (Kidder).-_____._.._._____--__- The tribes of northwestern (Herndndez de Alba)____- The Yaruros of the Capanaparo River (Petrullo) - --- Venezuelan Llanos, Food-gathering tribes of the (Kirch- hoff). Verde River and Walnut Creek valleys, Arizona, Antiquities of upper (Fewkes). Verde Valley, Aboriginal remains in (C. Mindeleff)______- Village of the Great Kivas on the Zufii Reservation, New Mexico, The (Roberts). PFW rrrrr PrP BUREAU OF AMERICAN ETHNOLOGY - 143, vol. 3, pp. 193- 198. 11, 159. 8, 3. 19, 635. _ 19, 957. 15, 245. 19, 573. 16, 267. 41, 485. 154, 267-284. 22) (pt.1); 3: 143, vol. 3, pp. 763- 798. 11, 159. 19, 1013. 143, vol. 2, pp. 585. 143, vol. 6, pp. 486. 44, 275. 33, 43. 575- 465- 128, Anthrop. No, 18. 75. Pap. 143, vol. 2, pp. 177- 182. 143, vol. 2, pp. 482. 143, vol. 2, pp. 476. 164, Anthrop. No. 54. 477- 471- Pap. 143, vol. 4, pp. 413- 438. 143, vol. 4, pp. 474, 123, Anthrop. No. 11. 143, vol. 4, pp. 468. 469- Pap. 445— - 28, 181. 13, 179. 111. INDEX TO AUTHORS AND TITLES Villages and village sites east of the Mississippi, Native (Bushnell). - Villages, castles, and towers of southwestern Colorado, Prehistoric (Fewkes). Villages in Middle Tennessee, Two prehistoric (Myer) __- Villages of the Algonquian, Siouan, and Caddoan tribes west of the Mississippi (Bushnell). Virginia, The Pamunkey Indians of (Pollard)____________ Vocabularies [of tribes of the extreme northwest] (Gibbs and Dall). Vocabulary of the Kiowa language (Harrington) -_________ Voget, Fred W. Current trends in the Wind River Sho- shone Sun Dance. Wagley, Charles, and Galvao, Eduardo: Wihewlapinapels esc. 22. one oe se he shewlienetehara 9). 8.02 ot ee eee Wakashan languages, Bibliography of the (Pilling)_____ __ Walker, Winslow M. The Troyville mounds, Catahoula Parish, La. Wallace, Anthony F. C. The modal personality of the Tuscarora Indians as revealed by the Rorschach test. See also Fenton, William N., editor. Walnut Creek and upper Verde River valleys, Arizona, Antiquities of (Fewkes). Warfare, cannibalism, and human trophies (Métraux) __- Wearran, /The: (irehhoff) .. 2... _......-....- He aaeige Washington, western, Tribes of (Gibbs)____-_.._________ Water lily in Maya art, The: a complex of alleged Asiatic origin (Rands). Wawenock myth texts from Maine (Speck)____________- Weapons; (Métraux)-...._........./2).% cSt) sapere). se wi Weavers, Navajo (Matthews)_-_-___- 2 labpred doie ge Weaving (© Neale) ® -425 wtieines felabala neariad..com Webb, William S.: An archeological survey of the Norris Basin in eastern Tennessee. An archeological survey of Wheeler Basin on the Tennessee River in northern Alabama. and DeJarnette, David L. Archeological survey of Pickwick Basin in the adjacent portions of the States of Alabama, Mississippi, and Tennessee (with four additional papers). Wedel, Waldo R.: An introduction to Pawnee archeology_.____________ Archeological investigations at Buena Vista Lake, Kern County, California. B B A B Qe jer} lest tee} fee} lee) > 109 69. 70. 41, 485. 77. 17. 1, 121. 84. 151, Anthrop. Pap. No. 42. 143, vol. 3, pp. 167- 178. 143, vol. 3, pp. 137- 148. 19. 113. 150. 28, 181. 143, vol. 5, pp. 383- 409. 143, vol. 3, pp. 869- 881. 1, 157. 151, Anthrop. Pap. No. 34. 43, 165. 143, vol. 5, pp. 229- 263. 3, 371. 143, vol. 5, pp. 97- 138. 118. 122. 129. 112. 130. 110 Wedel, Waldo R.—Continued Archeological materials from the vicinity of Mobridge, South Dakota. Observations on some nineteenth century pottery vessels from the Upper Missouri. Prehistory and the Missouri Valley development pro- gram: summary report on the Missouri River Basin archeological survey in 1948. Prehistory and the Missouri Valley development pro- gram: summary report on the Missouri River Basin archeological survey in 1949. See also Drucker, Philip. Weiant, C. W. An introduction to the ceramics of Tres Zapotes, Veracruz, Mexico. Weights, and calendars, Numbers, measures (Bennett) ___ West, Robert C. Cultural geography of modern Tarascan area. West Indies. See Aborigines of Porto Rico; Prehistoric island culture area. West Indies, The: An Introduction (Rouse)____________- Whaling in Asia and America, Aconite poison (Heizer) __- Wheat, Joe Ben. An archeological survey of the Addicks Dam Basin, southeast Texas. Wheeler Basin, northern Alabama, Archaeological survey of (Webb). White, Leslie A.: iNew materialfromAcoma_.....2.22..2-222 8222242 he Acomias Indians 2... 2. 22524 seee White, Theodore E. Butchering techniques at the Dodd and Phillips Ranch sites (appendix). Whitewater District, eastern Arizona, Archeological re- mains in the. Part I: House types (Roberts). Whitewater District, eastern Arizona, Archeological re- mains in. Part II: Artifacts and burials (Roberts). Whitewater District, eastern Arizona, Skeletal remains from (Stewart). Wild-rice gatherers of the upper lakes (Jenks) _____.____- Willey, Gordon R.: OS EN 1: i Se ee Pee | ee Prehistoric settlement patterns in the Virti Valley, Peru. The archeology of the Greater Pampa_____._______- Thejcultureiof La Candelaria.._-2) = 22 225-_42_ 22 and Jennings, Jesse D. and Newman, Marshall T. The Ormond Beach Mound, East Central Florida. In press. ise) joe} tes} ee) feo} BUREAU OF AMERICAN ETHNOLOGY 157, Anthrop. Pap. No. 45. 164, Anthrop. Pap. No. 51. 154, 1-59. 154, 61-101. 139. 143, vol. 5, pp. 601- 610. 7 143, vol. 4, pp. 495- 496. 133, Anthrop. Pap. No. 24. 154, 143-252. 122. 136, Anthrop. Pap. No. 32. AT 17: 158, 165. 121. 126. 126, 153. 19, 1013. 143, vol. 5, pp. 139- 204. 155. 143, vol. 1, pp. 25- 46. 143, vol. 2, pp. 661- 672. 164, Anthrop. Pap. No. 49. INDEX TO AUTHORS AND TITLES Willis, Bailey (collaborator). Early man in South America_ Wilson, Elsie A. The basal metabolic rates of South American Indians. Wind River Shoshone Sun Dance, The (Shimkin)________ Winnebacoruribe, cches(Radin) 25s = ene as eee Winship, G. P. The Coronado expedition, 1540-1542___ Witovoamytribess che (steward) =... 2. 2 Sam ae Wolpi, Arizona, Illustrated catalogue of collections from, in 1881 (J. Stevenson). Woodruff ossuary, a prehistory burial site in Phillips County, Kansas (Kivett). Woodward, Arthur. Trade goods, report on (appendix 2). In press. Wright, Fred. Eugene (collaborator). Early man in South America. Wyandot government: A short study of tribal society (Powell). Xingt River, Tribes of the lower and middle (Nimuendaji) Xingti River, Tribes of the upper (Lévi-Strauss) ________- Vaheansobhen(Cooper) 2 aeieeene se ak Nee ae Yaqui music, Yuman and (Densmore)-_-_______.--------- Yarrow, H. C.: A further contribution to the study of the mortuary customs of the North American Indians. Introduction to the study of mortuary customs among the North American Indians. Yaruros of the Capanaparo River, (Petrullo). Yucatan, southern, Maya Indians of (Gann)_______-___- Waicatansplants! (Steroenda) sae. oe se et oe ee Venezuela, The Narcatan towns (Steggerdayy- 2.22 bet lee ee Yuman and Serian languages. See Comparative lexi- cology of (Hewitt). Yuman and Yaqui music (Densmore) -_______-_--------- Zuni, New Mexico, Illustrated catalogue of collections from, in 1881 (J. Stevenson). Zufii ceremonialism, Introduction to (Bunzel)________--- Zufii child, The religious life of the (T. E. Stevenson) -___ Zuni creation myths, Outlines of (Cushing) __--_-__----_- Zuni culture-growth, Pueblo pottery as illustrative of (Cushing). Zui fetiches (Cushing).___________-- peek Eek 48 Sete reais Bunreimuians (M.-C; Stevenson)..- 252 om wa ill 52. 143, vol. 6, pp. 97- 104. 151, Anthrop. Pap. No. 41. 37, 35. 14, 329. 143, vol. 3, pp. 749- 762. 3, 511. 154, 103-141. 166. 52. 1, 57. 143, vol. 3, pp. 213- 243. 143, vol. 3, pp. 321- 348. 143, vol. 1, pp. 81- 106. 110. 1, 87. 4. 123, Anthrop. INon ae 64. 136, Anthrop. No. 29. 136, Anthrop. No. 30. 17, 299*. 116. 112 BUREAU OF AMERICAN ETHNOLOGY Zuni Indians, Ethnobotany of the (M. C. Stevenson) _--__- A 30, 31. Zunvkatcinas (Bunzel) es he eee. eis ee ANT 47,83 te Zuni Reservation, New Mexico, The Village of the Great B 111. Kivas on the (Roberts). Zum ritualipoetry (Bunzel) 2-2 22 82. SES . 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