Forty-Eighth Annual Report of the Bureau of American Ethnology to the Secretary of the Smithsonian Institution, 1930-1931, Government Printing Office, Washington, 1933.

PART II

Chapter 312,961 wordsPublic domain

LIST OF ANNUAL REPORTS OF THE BUREAU OF AMERICAN ETHNOLOGY WITH AN INDEX TO AUTHORS AND TITLES AND AN INTRODUCTORY NOTE

INTRODUCTORY NOTE

The importance of conducting ethnological research among the North American Indians was recognized by the United States Government as early as 1795, when Leonard S. Shaw was appointed deputy agent among the Cherokee, and was instructed by the then Secretary of War to study their language and home life and to collect materials for an Indian history. The Lewis and Clark expedition of 1804-1806 was planned by President Jefferson, who expressly instructed the members of the expedition to collect ethnological data on the Indians. During much of his life Jefferson manifested a deep interest in the ethnology of the American tribes and contributed many papers on them which are of scientific value even to-day. In 1820 Rev. Jedidiah Morse was commissioned to ascertain for the use of the Government “the actual state of the Indian tribes” of America. Schoolcraft’s works on the Indian tribes were aided by the Government; the War Department had made many expeditions and surveys in the West, and had published papers relating to the western districts; the cliff dwellings, pueblos, and tribes of the Mississippi Valley had been described by the Hayden survey; Maj. J. W. Powell, as chief of the United States Geographical and Geological Survey of the Rocky Mountain region, had studied and published his results on the tribes of the Rio Colorado region; but as yet no systematic research had commenced.

In 1877 began the publication of a series of ethnologic reports in quarto form under the title “Contributions to North American Ethnology.” After the United States Geographical and Geological Survey of the Rocky Mountain region was merged in the United States Geological Survey, provisions were made by Congress to continue the ethnologic researches and publications, and in 1879 the Bureau of Ethnology was organized and placed under the supervision of the Smithsonian Institution. Prof. Spencer F. Baird, Secretary of the Smithsonian Institution, selected Maj. J. W. Powell as the person most suitable to be the director of the new bureau.

Since its inception in 1879, the bureau, by the publication of its annual reports, bulletins, and contributions, and by answering questions of correspondents relative to Indian tribes, has continually helped to diffuse knowledge, and to make itself known in every civilized country in the world.

The strictly scientific results accomplished by the Bureau of American Ethnology relate to every department of anthropologic science--somatological, psychological, linguistic, sociologic, religious, technic, and esthetic--and are embodied principally in the annual reports, though much of this material is to be found in the bulletins and contributions. Among the practical results accomplished are: "(1) A study of the relations, location, and numbers of the tribes, and their classification into groups or families, based on affinity in language--a necessary basis for dealing with the tribes practically or scientifically; (2) a study of the numerous sociologic, religious, and industrial problems involved, an acquaintance with which is essential to the intelligent management of the tribes in adjusting them to the requirements of civilization; (3) a history of the relations of Indian and white races embodied in a volume on land cessions; (4) investigation into the physiology, medical practices, and sanitation of a people who suffer keenly from imperfect adaptation to the new conditions imposed on them; (5) the preparation of bibliographies embodying all works relating to the tribes; (6) a study of their industrial and economic resources; (7) a study of the antiquities of the country with a view to their record and preservation; (8) a handbook of the tribes, embodying, in condensed form, the accumulated information of many years”;[2] (9) the preservation of texts in aboriginal languages which are fast disappearing along with the culture to which they belong, and thus providing students and those engaged in commercial enterprises with the means of acquiring these languages; and (10) the publication of a series of handbooks on tribes of different geographical areas compiled and collated by the highest available authorities.

[Footnote 2: W. H. Holmes, in Handbook of the American Indians North of Mexico, Washington, 1907, Vol. I, p. 173 (Bull. 30, Bur. Amer. Ethn.).]

Maj. J. W. Powell, the director and founder of the Bureau of American Ethnology, died September 23, 1902, and on October 11 of the same year Mr. W. H. Holmes was appointed to succeed him, with the title of “chief of the bureau.” Mr. Holmes remained in office for nearly 9 years. On January 1, 1910, he severed his official connection with the bureau in order to resume his place as head curator of anthropology in the United States National Museum, and to become the curator of the National Gallery of Art. Mr. F. W. Hodge was designated to assume the administration of the bureau under the title “ethnologist in charge,” which position he occupied until March 1, 1918. On that day Mr. Hodge resigned in order to accept a position in the Museum of the American Indian (Heye Foundation), and Dr. J. Walter Fewkes was appointed chief of the bureau. Doctor Fewkes continued in office until January 15, 1928, when, shortly before his death, he retired. Mr. Matthew W. Stirling, the present chief, entered upon his duties as chief of the Bureau of American Ethnology on August 1, 1928. In addition to the chief, the scientific staff of the bureau comprises, in 1931, seven ethnologists, viz., Mr. J. N. B. Hewitt, Mr. J. P. Harrington, Dr. Truman Michelson, Dr. Frank H. H. Roberts, jr., Dr. W. D. Strong, Dr. John R. Swanton, and Dr. W. M. Walker. Besides the seven ethnologists there are numerous others who are not directly connected with the bureau, but who contribute or have contributed from time to time to the annual reports. These may be classed as collaborators and contributors. The collaborator of the bureau is Miss Frances Densmore, whose special field of study is Indian music. The contributors[3] are: Martha Warren Beckwith, Franz Boas, Biren Bonnerjea, John G. Bourke, Ruth L. Bunzel, Stewart Culin, Jeremiah Curtin, Frank H. Cushing, William H. Dall, Edwin Thompson Denig, Frances Densmore, J. Owen Dorsey, Jesse Walter Fewkes, Alice C. Fletcher, Gerard Fowke, Thomas Gann, Albert S. Gatschet, Melvin Randolph Gilmore, H. K. Haeberlin, J. P. Harrington, H. W. Henshaw, J. N. B. Hewitt, W. J. Hoffman, E. S. Holden, W. H. Holmes, Aleš Hrdlička, George Hunt, Albert Ernest Jenks, Francis La Flesche, Clay MacCauley, W. J. McGee, Garrick Mallery, Washington Matthews, Truman Michelson, C. Mindeleff, V. Mindeleff, James Mooney, Earl H. Morris, M. A. Muñiz, John Murdoch, William Edward Myer, E. W. Nelson, Elsie Clews Parsons, J. C. Pilling, J. W. Powell, Paul Radin, Stephen R. Riggs, Helen H. Roberts, Walter E. Roth, C. C. Royce, Frank Russell, Erminnie A. Smith, Frank G. Speck, Elsie Viault Steedman, James Stevenson, Matilda Coxe Stevenson, John R. Swanton, Gladys Tantaquidgeon, James A. Teit, Cyrus Thomas, Lucien M. Turner, Leslie A. White, George P. Winship, and H. C. Yarrow.

[Footnote 3: Contributors whose papers have appeared in the Annual Reports.]

The first annual report for the fiscal year 1879-80 was published in royal octavo form, and since then one annual report has been published for each fiscal year, except for the fiscal years 1919-1924, for which only one volume was issued (forty-first annual report), and they are all in royal octavo form. Until 1895 the reports were specially authorized by Congress, usually through concurrent resolutions, but since that date they have been issued under authority of the public printing law, approved January 12, 1895. At the close of the fiscal year 1930 forty-six annual reports have appeared (the fourteenth, seventeenth, eighteenth, nineteenth, twenty-second, and thirty-fifth, each in two parts or volumes), in all 52 volumes. The forty-seventh annual report (included in the index volume) is in the final proof form, and the forty-eighth annual report (general index) is in preparation.

The present (1931) maximum edition of the annual reports is 4,204, not including a few copies, generally between 100 and 500, ordered by the Superintendent of Documents for sale. Of the 4,204 copies the Bureau of American Ethnology receives 3,500 copies; the remaining 704 copies are distributed to Government libraries, etc. The quota (3,500 copies) allowed to the bureau is distributed free of charge, mainly to libraries and institutions of learning, and to collaborators and others engaged in anthropological research or in instruction. Nearly all annual reports are out of print.

ANNUAL REPORTS OF THE BUREAU OF AMERICAN ETHNOLOGY

=First Annual Report of the Bureau of Ethnology= to the Secretary of the Smithsonian Institution, 1879-1880, by J. W. Powell, director. (Vignette.) Washington, Government Printing Office, 1881.

Roy. 8ᵒ. XXXV, 603 p., 347 fig. (incl. 54 pl.), map.

Report of the director. P. XI-XXXIII.

On the Evolution of Language, as Exhibited in the Specialization of the Grammatic Processes, the Differentiation of the Parts of Speech, and the Integration of the Sentence; from a Study of Indian Languages, by J. W. Powell. P. 1-16.

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

Wyandot Government: A Short Study of Tribal Society, by J. W. Powell. P. 57-69.

On Limitations to the Use of Some Anthropologic Data, by J. W. Powell. P. 71-86.

A Further Contribution to the Study of the Mortuary Customs of the North American Indians, by Dr. H. C. Yarrow, acting assistant surgeon, U. S. Army. P. 87-203.

Studies in Central American Picture-Writing, by Edward S. Holden, professor of mathematics, U. S. Naval Observatory. P. 205-245.

Cessions of Land by Indian Tribes to the United States: Illustrated by Those in the State of Indiana, by C. C. Royce. P. 247-262.

Sign Language Among North American Indians Compared with that Among Other Peoples and Deaf-Mutes, by Garrick Mallery. P. 263-552.

Catalogue of Linguistic Manuscripts in the Library of the Bureau of Ethnology, by James C. Pilling. P. 553-577.

Illustration of the Method of Recording Indian Languages. From the manuscripts of Messers J. Owen Dorsey, A. S. Gatschet, and S. R. Riggs. P. 579-589.

Index.

=Second Annual Report of the Bureau of Ethnology= to the Secretary of the Smithsonian Institution, 1880-1881, by J. W. Powell, director. (Vignette.) Washington, Government Printing Office, 1883 (1884).

Roy. 8ᵒ. XXXVII, 477 p., 77 pl., fig. 1-35, 347-714 (382 of these forming 98 pl.), 2 maps.

Report of the director. P. XV-XXXVII.

Zuñi Fetiches, by Frank Hamilton Cushing. P. 3-45.

Myths of the Iroquois, by Erminnie A. Smith. P. 47-116.

Animal Carvings from Mounds of the Mississippi Valley, by Henry W. Henshaw. P. 117-166.

Navajo Silversmiths, by Dr. Washington Matthews, U. S. Army. P. 167-178.

Illustrated Catalogue of the Collections Obtained from the Indians of New Mexico and Arizona in 1879, by James Stevenson. P. 307-422.

Index. #/

=Third Annual Report of the Bureau of Ethnology= to the Secretary of the Smithsonian Institution, 1881-1882, by J. W. Powell, director. (Vignette.) Washington, Government Printing Office, 1884 (1885).

Roy. 8ᵒ. LXXIV, 606 p., 44 pl., 200 (+2 unnumbered) fig.

Report of the director. P. XII-LXXIV.

On Activital Similarities. P. LXV-LXXIV.

Notes on Certain Maya and Mexican Manuscripts, by Prof. Cyrus Thomas. P. 3-65.

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. P. 67-202.

Omaha Sociology, by Rev. J. Owen Dorsey. P. 205-370.

Navajo Weavers, by Dr. Washington Matthews, U. S. Army. P. 371-391.

Prehistoric Textile Fabrics of the United States, Derived from Impressions on Pottery, by William H. Holmes. P. 393-425.

Illustrated Catalogue of a Portion of the Collections made by the Bureau of Ethnology During the Field Season of 1881, by William H. Holmes. P. 427-510.

Illustrated Catalogue of the Collections Obtained from the Pueblos of Zuñi, New Mexico, and Wolpi, Arizona, in 1881, by James Stevenson. P. 511-594.

Index.

=Fourth Annual Report of the Bureau of Ethnology= to the Secretary of the Smithsonian Institution, 1882-1883, by J. W. Powell, director. (Vignette.) Washington, Government Printing Office, 1886 (1887).

Roy. 8ᵒ. LXIII, 532 p., 83 pl., 565 fig.

Report of the director. P. XXVII-LXIII.

Pictographs of the North American Indians; a Preliminary Paper, by Garrick Mallery. P. 3-256.

Pottery of the Ancient Pueblos, by William H. Holmes. P. 257-360.

Ancient Pottery of the Mississippi Valley, by William H. Holmes. P. 361-436.

Origin and Development of Form and Ornament in Ceramic Art, by William H. Holmes. P. 437-465.

A Study of Pueblo Pottery as Illustrative of Zuñi Culture Growth, by Frank Hamilton Cushing. P. 467-521.

Index.

=Fifth Annual Report of the Bureau of Ethnology= to the Secretary of the Smithsonian Institution, 1883-1884, by J. W. Powell, director. (Vignette.) Washington, Government Printing Office, 1887 (1888).

Roy. 8ᵒ. LIII, 564 p., 23 pl. (incl. 2 pocket maps), 77 fig.

Report of the director. P. XVII-LIII.

Burial Mounds of the Northern Sections of the United States, by Prof. Cyrus Thomas. P. 3-119.

The Cherokee Nation of Indians; a Narrative of Their Official Relations with the Colonial and Federal Governments, by Charles C. Royce. P. 121-378.

The Mountain Chant: A Navajo Ceremony, by Dr. Washington Matthews, U. S. Army. P. 379-467.

The Seminole Indians of Florida, by Clay MacCauley. P. 469-531.

The Religious Life of the Zuñi Child, by Mrs. Tilly E. Stevenson. P. 533-555.

Index.

=Sixth Annual Report of the Bureau of Ethnology= to the Secretary of the Smithsonian Institution, 1884-1885, by J. W. Powell, director. (Vignette.) Washington, Government Printing Office, 1887 (1888).

Roy. 8ᵒ. LVIII, 675 p. (incl. 6 p. of music), 10 pl. (incl. 2 pocket maps), 546 fig., 44 small unnumbered cuts.

Report of the director. P. XXIII-LVIII.

Ancient Art of the Province of Chiriqui, Colombia, by William H. Holmes. P. 3-187.

A Study of the Textile Art in Its Relation to the Development of Form and Ornament, by William H. Holmes. P. 189-252.

Aids to the Study of the Maya Codices, by Prof. Cyrus Thomas. P. 253-371.

Osage Traditions, by Rev. J. Owen Dorsey. P. 373-397.

The Central Eskimo, by Dr. Franz Boas. P. 399-669.

Index.

=Seventh Annual Report of the Bureau of Ethnology= to the Secretary of the Smithsonian Institution, 1885-1886, by J. W. Powell, director. (Vignette.) Washington, Government Printing Office, 1891 (1892).

Roy. 8ᵒ. XLIII, 409 p., 27 pl. (incl. pocket map), 39 fig.

Report of the director. P. XV-XLI.

Indian Linguistic Families of America North of Mexico, by J. W. Powell. P. 1-142.

The Midē´wiwin or “Grand Medicine Society” of the Ojibwa, by W. J. Hoffman. P. 143-300.

The Sacred Formulas of the Cherokees, by James Mooney. P. 301-397.

Index.

=Eighth Annual Report of the Bureau of Ethnology= to the Secretary of the Smithsonian Institution, 1886-1887, by J. W. Powell, director. (Vignette.) Washington, Government Printing Office, 1891 (1893).

Roy. 8ᵒ. XXXVI, 298 p., 123 pl., 118 fig.

Report of the director. P. XIII-XXXVI.

A Study of Pueblo Architecture: Tusayan and Cibola, by Victor Mindeleff. P. 3-228.

Ceremonial of Hasjelti Dailjis and Mythical Sand Painting of the Navajo Indians, by James Stevenson. P. 229-285.

Index. #/

=Ninth Annual Report of the Bureau of Ethnology= to the Secretary of the Smithsonian Institution, 1887-1888, by J. W. Powell, director. (Vignette.) Washington, Government Printing Office, 1892 (1893).

Roy. 8ᵒ. XLVI, 617 p., 8 pl., 448 fig.

Report of the director. P. XIX-XLVI.

Ethnological Results of the Point Barrow Expedition, by John Murdoch, naturalist and observer, International Polar Expedition to Point Barrow, Alaska, 1881-1883. P. 3-441.

The Medicine-Men of the Apache, by John G. Bourke, captain, Third Cavalry, U. S. Army. P. 443-603.

Index.

=Tenth Annual Report of the Bureau of Ethnology= to the Secretary of the Smithsonian Institution, 1888-1889, by J. W. Powell, director. (Vignette.) Washington, Government Printing Office, 1893. (1894).

Roy. 8ᵒ. XXX, 822 p., 54 pl., 1291 fig., 116 small unnumbered cuts.

Report of the director. P. III-XXX.

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

Index.

=Eleventh Annual Report of the Bureau of Ethnology= to the Secretary of the Smithsonian Institution, 1892-1893, by J. W. Powell, director. (Vignette.) Washington, Government Printing Office, 1894.

Roy. 8ᵒ. XLVII, 553 p., 50 pl., 200 fig.

Report of the director. P. XXI-XLVII.

The Sia, by Matilda Coxe Stevenson. P. 3-157.

Ethnology of the Ungava District, Hudson Bay Territory, by Lucien M. Turner. Edited by John Murdoch. P. 159-350.

A Study of Siouan Cults, by James Owen Dorsey. P. 351-544.

Index.

=Twelfth Annual Report of the Bureau of Ethnology= to the Secretary of the Smithsonian Institution, 1890-1891, by J. W. Powell, director. (Vignette.) Washington, Government Printing Office, 1894.

Roy. 8ᵒ. XLVIII, 742 p., 42 pl., 344 fig.

Report of the director. P. XIX-XLVII.

Report on the Mound Exploration of the Bureau of Ethnology, by Cyrus Thomas. P. 3-730.

Index.

=Thirteenth Annual Report of the Bureau of Ethnology= to the Secretary of the Smithsonian Institution, 1891-1892, by J. W. Powell, director. (Vignette.) Washington, Government Printing Office, 1896.

Roy. 8ᵒ. LIX, 462 p., 60 pl., 330 fig.

Report of the director. P. XIX-LIX.

Prehistoric Textile Art of Eastern United States, by William Henry Holmes. P. 3-46.

Stone Art, by Gerard Fowke. P. 47-178.

Aboriginal Remains in Verde Valley, Arizona, by Cosmos Mindeleff. P. 179-261.

Omaha Dwellings, Furniture, and Implements, by James Owen Dorsey. P. 263-288.

Casa Grande Ruin, by Cosmos Mindeleff. P. 289-319.

Outlines of Zuñi Creation Myths, by Frank Hamilton Cushing. P. 321-447.

Index.

=Fourteenth Annual Report of the Bureau of Ethnology= to the Secretary of the Smithsonian Institution, 1892-1893, by J. W. Powell, director. (Vignette.) Washington, Government Printing Office, 1896 (1897). In two parts--part 1, part 2.

Roy. 8ᵒ. Two parts. LXI, 1-637; 639-1136 p., 122 pl., 104 fig.

Report of the director. P. XXV-LXI.

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

The Coronado Expedition, 1540-1542, by George Parker Winship. P. 329-613.

Index to part 1.

The Ghost-dance Religion and the Sioux Outbreak of 1890, by James Mooney. P. 641-1110.

Index to part 2.

=Fifteenth Annual Report of the Bureau of Ethnology= to the Secretary of the Smithsonian Institution, 1893-1894, by J. W. Powell, director. (Vignette.) Washington, Government Printing Office, 1897.

Roy. 8ᵒ. CXXI, 366 p., frontispiece, 125 pl., 49 fig.

Report of the director. P. XV-CXXI.

On Regimentation. P. CIV-CXXI.

Stone Implements of the Potomac-Chesapeake Tidewater Province, by William Henry Holmes. P. 3-152.

The Siouan Indians: A Preliminary Sketch, by W. J. McGee. P. 153-204.

Siouan Sociology: A Posthumous Paper, by James Owen Dorsey. P. 205-244.

Tusayan Katcinas, by Jesse Walter Fewkes. P. 245-313.

The Repair of Casa Grande Ruin, Ariz., in 1891, by Cosmos Mindeleff. P. 315-349.

Index.

=Sixteenth Annual Report of the Bureau of American Ethnology= to the Secretary of the Smithsonian Institution, 1894-1895, by J. W. Powell, director. (Vignette.) Washington, Government Printing Office, 1897.

Roy. 8ᵒ. CXIX, 326 p., 81 pl., 83 fig.

Report of the director. P. XIII-CXIX.

List of Publications of the Bureau of American Ethnology. P. CI-CXIX.

Primitive Trephining in Peru, by Manuel Antonio Muñiz and W. J. McGee. P. 3-72.

The Cliff-ruins of Canyon de Chelly, Arizona, by Cosmos Mindeleff. P. 73-198.

Day Symbols of the Maya Year, by Cyrus Thomas. P. 199-265.

Tusayan Snake Ceremonies, by Jesse Walter Fewkes. P. 267-312.

Index. #/

=Seventeenth Annual Report of the Bureau of American Ethnology= to the Secretary of the Smithsonian Institution, 1895-1896, by J. W. Powell, director. (Vignette.) Washington, Government Printing Office, 1898. In two parts--part 1, part 2. (Pt. 1, 1900; Pt. 2, 1901.)

Roy. 8ᵒ. Two parts, XCV, 1-128, 129*-344*, 129-468; 465-752 p., 182 pl., 357 fig.

Report of the director. P. XXV-XCIII.

List of Publications of the Bureau of American Ethnology. P. LXXV-XCIII.

The Seri Indians, by W. J. McGee. P. 1-128, 129*-344*.

Comparative Lexicology of the Serian and Yuman Languages, by J. N. B. Hewitt. P. 299*-344*.

Calendar History of the Kiowa Indians, by James Mooney. P. 129-445.

Index to part 1.

Navaho Houses, by Cosmos Mindeleff. P. 469-517.

Archeological Expedition to Arizona in 1895, by Jesse Walter Fewkes. P. 519-744.

Index to part 2.

=Eighteenth Annual Report of the Bureau of American Ethnology= to the Secretary of the Smithsonian Institution, 1896-1897, by J. W. Powell, director. (Vignette.) Washington, Government Printing Office, 1899. In two parts--part 1, part 2. (Pt. 1, 1901; Pt. 2, 1902.)

Roy. 8ᵒ. Two parts. LVII, 1-518; 519-997 p., 174 pl., 165 fig.

Report of the director. P. XXIII-LVII.

The Eskimo About Bering Strait, by William Edward Nelson. P. 3-518.

Indian Land Cessions in the United States, compiled by Charles C. Royce, with an introduction by Cyrus Thomas. P. 521-964.

Index.

=Nineteenth Annual Report of the Bureau of American Ethnology= to the Secretary of the Smithsonian Institution, 1897-1898, by J. W. Powell, director. (Vignette.) Washington, Government Printing Office, 1900 (1902). In two parts--part 1, part 2.

Roy. 8ᵒ. Two parts, XCII, 1-568, 569*-576*, 569-1160 p., frontispiece, 80 pl., 49 fig.

Report of the director. P. IX-XCII.

Esthetology, or the Science of Activities Designed to Give Pleasure. P. LV-XCII.

Myths of the Cherokee, by James Mooney, P. 3-548.

Index to part 1.

Tusayan Migration Traditions, by Jesse Walter Fewkes. P. 573-633.

Localization of Tusayan Clans, by Cosmos Mindeleff. P. 635-653.

Mounds in Northern Honduras, by Thomas Gann. P. 655-692.

Mayan Calendar Systems, by Cyrus Thomas. P. 693-819.

Primitive Numbers, by W. J. McGee. P. 821-851.

Numeral Systems of Mexico and Central America, by Cyrus Thomas. P. 853-955.

Tusayan Flute and Snake Ceremonies, by Jesse Walter Fewkes. P. 957-1011.

The Wild-rice Gatherers of the Upper Lakes; a Study in American Primitive Economics, by Albert Ernest Jenks. P. 1013-1137.

Index to part 2.

=Twentieth Annual Report of the Bureau of American Ethnology= to the Secretary of the Smithsonian Institution, 1898-1899, by J. W. Powell, director. (Vignette.) Washington, Government Printing Office, 1903.

Roy. 8ᵒ. CCXXIV, 237 p., 180 pl., 79 fig.

Report of the director. P. XXIX-LVII.

Technology, of the Science of Industries. P. XXIX-LVII.

Sociology, or the Science of Institutions. P. LIX-CXXXVIII.

Philology, or the Science of Activities Designed for Expression. P. CXXXIX-CLXX.

Sophiology, or the Science of Activities Designed to Give Instruction. P. CLXXI-CXCVII.

List of Publications of the Bureau of American Ethnology. P. CXCIX-CCXXIII.

Aboriginal Pottery of the Eastern United States, by W. H. Holmes, P. 1-201.

Index.

=Twenty-first Annual Report of the Bureau of American Ethnology= to the Secretary of the Smithsonian Institution, 1899-1900, by J. W. Powell, director. (Vignette.) Washington, Government Printing Office, 1903.

Roy. 8ᵒ. XL, 360 p., 69 pl.

Report of the director. P. VII-XL.

Hopi Katcinas, Drawn by Native Artists, by Jesse Walter Fewkes. P. 3-126.

Iroquoian Cosmology, by J. N. B. Hewitt. P. 127-339.

Index.

=Twenty-second Annual Report of the Bureau of American Ethnology= to the Secretary of the Smithsonian Institution, 1900-1901, by J. W. Powell, director. (Vignette.) Washington, Government Printing Office, 1903. In two parts--part 1, part 2.[4]

[Footnote 4: In the general index (Forty-eighth Annual Report) the two parts of the Twenty-second Annual Report are referred to as 22, i and 22, ii, respectively.]

Roy. 8ᵒ. Two parts. XLIV, 1-320; 1-372 p., 91 pl., 178 fig.

Report of the acting director. P. VII-XLIV.

Two Summers’ Work in Pueblo Ruins, by Jesse Walter Fewkes. P. 3-195.

Mayan Calendar Systems, II, by Cyrus Thomas. P. 197-305.

Index to part 1.

The Hako, a Pawnee Ceremony, by Alice C. Fletcher, holder of Thaw Fellowship, Peabody Museum, Harvard University. P. 5-368.

Index to part 2.

=Twenty-third Annual Report of the Bureau of American Ethnology= to the Secretary of the Smithsonian Institution, 1901-1902, by J. W. Powell, director. (Vignette.) Washington, Government Printing Office, 1904 (1905).

Roy. 8ᵒ. XLV, 634 p., 139 pl., 34 fig.

Report of the acting director. P. VII-XLV.

The Zuñi Indians; Their Mythology, Esoteric Fraternities, and Ceremonies, by Matilda Coxe Stevenson. P. 1-608.

Index.

=Twenty-fourth Annual Report of the Bureau of American Ethnology= to the Secretary of the Smithsonian Institution, 1902-1903, by W. H. Holmes, chief. (Vignette.) Washington, Government Printing Office, 1907.

Roy. 8ᵒ. XL, 846 p., 21 pl., 1112 fig.

Report of the chief. P. VII-XL.

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

Index.

=Twenty-fifth Annual Report of the Bureau of American Ethnology= to the Secretary of the Smithsonian Institution, 1903-1904, by W. H. Holmes, chief. (Vignette.) Washington, Government Printing Office, 1907.

Roy. 8ᵒ. XXIX, 296 p., 129 pl., 70 fig.

Report of the chief. P. IX-XXIX.

The Aborigines of Porto Rico and Neighboring Islands, by Jesse Walter Fewkes. P. 3-220.

Certain Antiquities of Eastern Mexico, by Jesse Walter Fewkes. P. 221-284.

Index.

=Twenty-sixth Annual Report of the Bureau of American Ethnology= to the Secretary of the Smithsonian Institution, 1904-1905, by W. H. Holmes, chief. (Vignette.) Washington, Government Printing Office, 1908.

Roy. 8ᵒ. XXXI, 512 p., 58 pl., 117 fig.

Report of the chief. P. VII-XXXI.

The Pima Indians, by Frank Russell. P. 3-389.

The Tlingit Indians, by John R. Swanton. P. 391-485.

Index.

=Twenty-seventh Annual Report of the Bureau of American Ethnology= to the Secretary of the Smithsonian Institution, 1905-1906, by W. H. Holmes, chief. (Vignette.) Washington, Government Printing Office, 1911.

Roy. 8ᵒ. P. 672, 65 pl., 132 fig.

Report of the chief. P. 5-14.

The Omaha Tribe, by Alice C. Fletcher, holder of the Thaw Fellowship, Peabody Museum, Harvard University, and Francis La Flesche, a member of the Omaha Tribe. P. 15-654.

Index. #/

=Twenty-eighth Annual Report of the Bureau of American Ethnology= to the Secretary of the Smithsonian Institution, 1906-1907, by W. H. Holmes, chief. (Vignette.) Washington, Government Printing Office, 1912.

Roy. 8ᵒ. P. 308, XXXV, 103 pl., 68 fig.

Report of the chief. P. 7-22.

Casa Grande, Arizona, by Jesse Walter Fewkes. P. 25-179.

Antiquities of the Upper Verde River and Walnut Creek Valleys, Arizona, by Jesse Walter Fewkes. P. 181-220.

Preliminary Report on the Linguistic Classification of Algonquian Tribes, by Truman Michelson. P. 221-290b.

Index.

List of Publications of the Bureau of American Ethnology. P. I-XXXV.

=Twenty-ninth Annual Report of the Bureau of American Ethnology= to the Secretary of the Smithsonian Institution, 1907-1908, by W. H. Holmes, chief. (Vignette.) Washington, Government Printing Office, 1916.

Roy. 8ᵒ. P. 636, 21 pl., 31 maps (1-29, 29a-30), 1 diagram.

Report of the chief. P. 7-25.

The Ethnogeography of the Tewa Indians, by John Peabody Harrington. P. 29-618.

Index.

=Thirtieth Annual Report of the Bureau of American Ethnology= to the Secretary of the Smithsonian Institution, 1908-1909, by W. H. Holmes, chief. (Vignette.) Washington, Government Printing Office, 1915.

Roy. 8ᵒ. P. 450, 7 pl., 6 fig.

Report of the chief. P. 9-28.

Ethnobotany of the Zuñi Indians, by Matilda Coxe Stevenson. P. 31-102.

An Inquiry into the Animism and Folklore of the Guiana Indians, by Walter E. Roth, Commissioner of the Pomeroon District, British Guiana; late royal commissioner appointed to inquire into the condition of the natives of Western Australia; corresponding member of the Anthropological Societies of Berlin and Florence; Author of North Queensland Ethnography, etc. P. 103-386. (Paragraphs 1-370.)

List of Publications of the Bureau of American Ethnology, with Index to Authors and Titles. P. 387-425.

Index.

=Thirty-first Annual Report of the Bureau of American Ethnology= to the Secretary of the Smithsonian Institution, 1909-1910, by F. W. Hodge, ethnologist in charge. (Vignette.) Washington, Government Printing Office, 1916.

Roy. 8ᵒ. P. 1037, 3 pl., 24 fig.

Report of the ethnologist in charge. P. 7-26.

Tsimshian Mythology, by Franz Boas, based on texts recorded by Henry W. Tate. P. 29-1037. #/

=Thirty-second Annual Report of the Bureau of American Ethnology= to the Secretary of the Smithsonian Institution, 1910-1911, by F. W. Hodge, ethnologist in charge. (Vignette.) Washington, Government Printing Office, 1918.

Roy. 8ᵒ. P. 819.

Report of the ethnologist in charge. P. 9-34.

Seneca Fiction, Legends, and Myths, collected by Jeremiah Curtin and J. N. B. Hewitt; edited by J. N. B. Hewitt. P. 37-813.

Index.

=Thirty-third Annual Report of the Bureau of American Ethnology= to the Secretary of the Smithsonian Institution, 1911-1912, by F. W. Hodge, ethnologist in charge. (Vignette.) Washington, Government Printing Office, 1919.

Roy. 8ᵒ. P. 677, 97 pl. (1-29, 29a-30, 30a, 31-75, 76-90, 91-95), 112 fig.

Report of the ethnologist in charge. P. 9-40.

Uses of Plants by the Indians of the Missouri River Region, by Melvin Randolph Gilmore. P. 43-154.

Preliminary Account of the Antiquities of the Region Between the Mancos and La Plata Rivers in Southwestern Colorado, by Earl H. Morris. P. 155-206.

Designs on Prehistoric Hopi Pottery, by Jesse Walter Fewkes. P. 207-284.

The Hawaiian Romance of Laieikawai, with introduction and translation, by Martha Warren Beckwith. P. 285-666.

Index.

=Thirty-fourth Annual Report of the Bureau of American Ethnology= to the Secretary of the Smithsonian Institution, 1912-1913, by F. W. Hodge, ethnologist in charge. (Vignette.) Washington, Government Printing Office, 1922.

Roy. 8ᵒ. P. 281, 120 pl., 69 fig.

Report of the ethnologist in charge. P. 7-32.

A Prehistoric Island Culture Area of America, by Jesse Walter Fewkes. P. 35-271.

Index.

=Thirty-fifth Annual Report of the Bureau of American Ethnology= to the Secretary of the Smithsonian Institution, 1913-1914, by F. W. Hodge, ethnologist in charge. (Vignette.) Washington, Government Printing Office, 1921. In two parts--part 1, part 2.

Roy. 8ᵒ. Two parts. P. 1-794, XI; VIII, 795-1481.

Report of the ethnologist in charge. P. 9-37.

Note on the accompanying paper. P. 39 _sq._

Ethnology of the Kwakiutl, based on data collected by George Hunt, by Franz Boas. P. 43-794; 795-1473.

Index to part 1.

Index to part 2. #/

=Thirty-sixth Annual Report of the Bureau of American Ethnology= to the Secretary of the Smithsonian Institution, 1914-1915, by F. W. Hodge, ethnologist in charge. (Vignette.) Washington, Government Printing Office, 1921.

Roy. 8ᵒ. P. 604, 23 pl., 15 fig.

Report of the ethnologist in charge. P. 9-34.

The Osage Tribe: Rite of the Chiefs; Sayings of the Ancient Men, by Francis La Flesche. P. 37-597.

Index.

=Thirty-seventh Annual Report of the Bureau of American Ethnology= to the Secretary of the Smithsonian Institution, 1915-1916, by F. W. Hodge, ethnologist in charge. (Vignette.) Washington, Government Printing Office, 1923.

Roy. 8ᵒ. VII, 560 p., 58 pl., 38 fig.

Report of the ethnologist in charge. P. 1-31.

The Winnebago Tribe, by Paul Radin. P. 35-550.

Index.

=Thirty-eighth Annual Report of the Bureau of American Ethnology= to the Secretary of the Smithsonian Institution, 1916-1917, by F. W. Hodge, ethnologist in charge. (Vignette.) Washington, Government Printing Office, 1924.[5]

[Footnote 5: In the general index, Forty-eighth Annual Report, the references to the Thirty-eighth Annual Report are by sections unless preceded by the letter “p.”]

Roy. 8ᵒ. VII, 745 p., 183 pl., 341 fig.

Report of the ethnologist in charge. P. 1-21.

An Introductory Study of the Arts, Crafts, and Customs of the Guiana Indians, by Walter Edmund Roth. P. 25-720 (secs. 1-941).

Index and glossary.

=Thirty-ninth Annual Report of the Bureau of American Ethnology= to the Secretary of the Smithsonian Institution, 1917-1918, by J. Walter Fewkes, chief. (Vignette.) Washington, Government Printing Office, 1925.

Roy. 8ᵒ. P. 636, 17 pl., 4 fig.

Report of the chief. P. 7-28.

The Osage Tribe: Rite of Vigil, by Francis La Flesche. P. 31-630.

Index.

=Fortieth Annual Report of the Bureau of American Ethnology= to the Secretary of the Smithsonian Institution, 1918-1919, by J. Walter Fewkes, chief. (Vignette.) Washington, Government Printing Office, 1925.

Roy. 8ᵒ. VII, 664 p., 2 pl., 2 fig.

Report of the chief. P. 1-20.

The Mythical Origin of the White Buffalo Dance of the Fox Indians; Together with Texts on Four Minor Sacred Packs Appertaining to This Ceremony, by Truman Michelson. P. 23-289.

The Autobiography of a Fox Indian Woman, by Truman Michelson. P. 291-349.

Notes on Fox Mortuary Customs and Beliefs, by Truman Michelson. P. 351-496.

Notes on the Fox Society Known as “Those Who Worship the Little Spotted Buffalo,” by Truman Michelson. P. 497-539.

The Traditional Origin of the Fox Society Known as “The Singing-around Rite,” by Truman Michelson. P. 541-658.

Index.

=Forty-first Annual Report of the Bureau of American Ethnology= to the Secretary of the Smithsonian Institution, 1919-1924, by J. Walter Fewkes, chief. (Vignette.) Washington, Government Printing Office, 1928.

Roy. 8ᵒ. IX, 626 p., 137 pl., 200 fig.

Report of the chief for the fiscal year ended June 30, 1920. P. 1-21.

Report of the chief for the fiscal year ended June 30, 1921. P. 25-44.

Report of the chief for the fiscal year ended June 30, 1922. P. 47-73.

Report of the chief for the fiscal year ended June 30, 1923. P. 77-95.

Report of the chief for the fiscal year ended June 30, 1924. P. 99-116.

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. P. 119-484.

Two Prehistoric Villages in Middle Tennessee, by William Edward Myer. P. 485-614.

Index.

=Forty-second Annual Report of the Bureau of American Ethnology= to the Secretary of the Smithsonian Institution, 1924-1925, by J. Walter Fewkes, chief. (Vignette.) Washington, Government Printing Office, 1928.

Roy. 8ᵒ. VII, 900 p., 13 pl., 108 fig.

Report of the chief. P. 1-19.

Social Organization and Social Usages of the Indians of the Creek Confederacy, by John R. Swanton. P. 23-472.

Religious Beliefs and Medical Practices of the Creek Indians, by John R. Swanton. P. 473-672.

Aboriginal Culture of the Southeast, by John R. Swanton. P. 673-726.

Indian Trails of the Southeast, by William Edward Myer. P. 727-857.

Index.

=Forty-third Annual Report of the Bureau of American Ethnology= to the Secretary of the Smithsonian Institution, 1925-1926, by J. Walter Fewkes, chief. (Vignette.) Washington, Government Printing Office, 1928.

Roy. 8ᵒ. VII, 828 p., 44 pl., 9 fig.

Report of the chief. P. 1-19.

The Osage Tribe: Two Versions of the Child-Naming Rite, by Francis La Flesche. P. 23-164.

Wawenock Myth Texts from Maine, by Frank G. Speck. (The texts are published with the permission of the Division of Anthropology, National Museum of Canada.) P. 165-197.

Native Tribes and Dialects of Connecticut; Mohegan-Pequot Diary, by Frank G. Speck. P. 199-287. (Containing: Mohegan Medicinal Practices, Weather-lore, and Superstitions, by Gladys Tantaquidgeon.) P. 264-276.

Picurís Children’s Stories, with texts and songs, by J. P. Harrington and Helen H. Roberts. P. 289-447.

Iroquoian Cosmology; second part, with introduction and notes, by J. N. B. Hewitt. P. 449-819.

Index.

=Forty-fourth Annual Report of the Bureau of American Ethnology= to the Secretary of the Smithsonian Institution, 1926-1927, by J. Walter Fewkes, chief. (Vignette.) Washington, Government Printing Office, 1928.

Roy. 8ᵒ. VII, 555 p., 98 pl., 16 fig.

Report of the chief. P. 1-19.

Exploration of Burton Mound at Santa Barbara, California, by John P. Harrington. P. 23-168.

Social and Religious Beliefs and Usages of the Chickasaw Indians, by John R. Swanton. P. 169-273.

Uses of Plants by the Chippewa Indians, by Frances Densmore. P. 275-397.

Archeological Investigations--II, by Gerard Fowke. P. 399-540.

Index.

=Forty-fifth Annual Report of the Bureau of American Ethnology= to the Secretary of the Smithsonian Institution, 1927-1928, by H. W. Dorsey, chief clerk. (Vignette.) Washington, Government Printing Office, 1930.

Roy. 8ᵒ. VII, 857 p., 29 pl., 47 fig.

Report of the chief clerk. P. 1-19.

The Salishan Tribes of the Western Plateaus, by James A. Teit; edited by Franz Boas. P. 23-396.

Tattooing and Face and Body Painting of the Thompson Indians, British Columbia, by James A. Teit; edited by Franz Boas. P. 397-439.

Ethnobotany of the Thompson Indians of British Columbia, based on field notes by James A. Teit; edited by Elsie Viault Steedman. P. 441-522.

The Osage Tribe: Rite of the Wa-xo´-be, by Francis La Flesche. P. 523-833.

Index.

=Forty-sixth Annual Report of the Bureau of American Ethnology= to the Secretary of the Smithsonian Institution, 1928-1929, by M. W. Stirling, chief. (Vignette.) Washington, Government Printing Office, 1930.

Roy. 8ᵒ. VII, 654 p., 80 pl., 35 fig.

Report of the chief. P. 1-16.

Anthropological Survey in Alaska, by Aleš Hrdlička. P. 19-374.

Indian Tribes of the Upper Missouri; Report to the Honorable Isaac S. Stevens, by Edwin Thompson Denig; edited with notes and biographical sketch, by J. N. B. Hewitt. P. 375-628.

Index. #/

=Forty-seventh Annual Report of the Bureau of American Ethnology= to the Secretary of the Smithsonian Institution, 1929--1930, by M. W. Stirling, chief. (Vignette.) Washington, Government Printing Office, 1932.

Roy. 8ᵒ. VII, 1108 p., 53 pl., 26 fig.

Report of the chief. P. 1-14.

The Acoma Indians, by Leslie A. White. P. 17-192.

Isleta, New Mexico, by Elsie Clews Parsons. P. 193-466.

Introduction to Zuñi Ceremonialism, by Ruth L. Bunzel. P. 467-544.

Zuñi Origin Myths, by Ruth L. Bunzel. P. 545-609.

Zuñi Ritual Poetry, by Ruth L. Bunzel. P. 611-835.

Zuñi Katcinas, by Ruth L. Bunzel. P. 837-1086.

Index.

=Forty-eighth Annual Report of the Bureau of American Ethnology= to the Secretary of the Smithsonian Institution, 1930-1931, by M. W. Stirling, chief. (Vignette.) Washington, Government Printing Office, 1932.

Roy. 8ᵒ. V, 1221 p.

Report of the chief. P. 1-21.

General Index to the Annual Reports of the Bureau of American Ethnology, vols. 1-48 (1879-1931), compiled by Biren Bonnerjea. P. 25-1221. #/

INDEX TO AUTHORS AND TITLES

=A=

Aboriginal Culture of the Southeast (Swanton) 42: 673.

Aboriginal Pottery of the Eastern United States (Holmes) 20: 1.

Aboriginal Remains in Verde Valley (C. Mindeleff) 13: 179.

Aborigines of Porto Rico and Neighboring Islands (Fewkes) 25: 3.

Account, Preliminary, of the Antiquities of the Region Between the Mancos and La Plata Rivers, in Southwestern Colorado (Morris) 33: 155.

Acoma Indians, the (White) 47: 17.

Activital Similarities (Powell) 3: LXV.

Activities. _See_ Esthetology; Philology; Sociology; Sophiology; Technology.

Aids to the Study of Maya Codices (Thomas) 6: 253.

Alaska, Anthropological Survey in (Hrdlička) 46: 19.

Alaska. _See_ Eskimo; Point Barrow; Yukon.

Algonquian Tribes, Preliminary Report in Classification of (Michelson) 28: 221.

Algonquian Tribes. _See_ names of different tribes.

Ancient Art of the Province of Chiriqui, Colombia (Holmes) 6: 3.

Ancient Men, Sayings of the; The Osage Tribe: Rite of the Chiefs (La Flesche) 36: 37.

Ancient Pottery of the Mississippi Valley (Holmes) 4: 361.

Ancient Pueblos, Pottery of the (Holmes) 4: 257.

Animal Carvings from Mounds of the Mississippi Valley (Henshaw) 2: 117.

Animals. _See_ Ethnozoology.

Animism and Folklore of the Guiana Indians, an Inquiry into (Roth) 30: 103.

Annual Reports of the Bureau of American Ethnology, General Index to (Bonnerjea) 48: 25.

Anthropologic Data, Limitations to the Use of Some (Powell) 1: 71.

Anthropological Survey in Alaska (Hrdlička) 46: 19.

Antiquities, Certain, of Eastern Mexico (Fewkes) 25: 221.

Antiquities, Preliminary Account of the, of the Region Between the Mancos and La Plata Rivers in Southwestern Colorado (Morris) 33: 155.

Apache, the Medicine-Men of the (Bourke) 9: 443.

Archeological Expedition to Arizona in 1895 (Fewkes) 17: 519.

Archeological Investigations, II (Fowke) 44: 399.

Architecture, a Study of Pueblo; Tusayan and Cibola (V. Mindeleff) 8: 3.

Arizona, Aboriginal Remains in Verde Valley in (C. Mindeleff) 13: 179.

Arizona, Archeological Expedition to, in 1895 (Fewkes) 17: 519.

Arizona, Illustrated Catalogue of Collections from, in 1879 (J. Stevenson) 2: 307.

Arizona, Illustrated Catalogue of Collections from, in 1881 (J. Stevenson) 3: 511.

Arizona, the Cliff ruins of Canyon de Chelly in (C. Mindeleff) 16: 73.

Arizona. _See_ Casa Grande.

Art, Ancient, of the Province of Chiriqui, Colombia (Holmes) 6: 3.

Art, Ceramic, Form and Ornament in (Holmes) 4: 437.

Art in Shell of the Ancient Americans (Holmes) 2: 179.

Art, Prehistoric Textile, of Eastern United States (Holmes) 13: 3.

Art, Stone (Fowke) 13: 47.

Art, Textile, a Study of the (Holmes) 6: 189.

Arts, an Introductory Study of the, Crafts, and Customs of the Guiana Indians (Roth) 38: 25.

Artists, Native, Hopi Kachinas Drawn by (Fewkes) 21: 3.

Autobiography, the, of a Fox Indian Woman (Michelson) 40: 291.

B

Basketry, Coiled, in British Columbia and Surrounding Region (Haeberlin-Teit-Roberts) 41: 119.

=Beckwith, Martha Warren.= The Hawaiian Romance of Laieikawai; with Introduction and Translation 33: 285.

Beliefs and Usages, Social and Religious, of the Chickasaw Indians (Swanton) 44: 169.

Beliefs, Notes on Fox Mortuary Customs and (Michelson) 40: 351.

Beliefs, Religious, and Medical Practices of the Creek Indians (Swanton) 42: 473.

Bering Strait, the Eskimo about (Nelson) 18: 3.

=Boas, Franz.= Ethnology of the Kwakiutl, based on data collected by George Hunt 35: 43, 795.

---- The Central Eskimo 6: 399.

---- Tsimshian Mythology, based on texts recorded by H. W. Tate 31: 29.

---- _See_ Haeberlin-Teit-Roberts; Teit, J. A.

=Bonnerjea, Biren.= General Index to the Annual Reports of the Bureau of American Ethnology, 1-48 (1879-1931) 48: 25.

=Bourke, John G.= The Medicine-Men of the Apache 9: 443.

British Columbia, Coiled Basketry in, and Surrounding Region (Haeberlin-Teit-Roberts) 41: 119.

British Columbia, Ethnobotany of the Thompson Indians of (Teit-Steedman) 45: 441.

British Columbia, Tattooing and Face and Body Painting of the Thompson Indians of (Teit-Boas) 45: 397.

Buffalo Dance, White, of the Fox Indians, the Mythical Origin of the (Michelson) 40: 23.

Buffalo, Little Spotted, Those who worship the, Notes on Fox Society known as (Michelson) 40: 497.

=Bunzel, Ruth L.= Introduction to Zuñi Ceremonialism 47: 467.

---- Zuñi Katcinas 47: 837.

---- Zuñi Origin Myths 47: 545.

---- Zuñi Ritual Poetry 47: 611.

Bureau of American Ethnology, General Index to the Annual Reports of the (Bonnerjea) 48: 25.

Bureau of American Ethnology, List of Annual Reports of the (Bonnerjea) 48: 1185.

Bureau of American Ethnology, List of Publications of the 16: CI; 17: LXXV; 28: I; 30: 387.

Burial Mounds of the Western Sections of the United States (Thomas) 5: 3.

Burton Mound, Explorations of the, at Santa Barbara, Calif. (Harrington) 44: 23.

C

Calendar History of the Kiowa Indians (Mooney) 17: 129.

Calendar Systems, Mayan (Thomas) 19: 693; 22, i: 197.

California. _See_ Santa Barbara.

Canyon de Chelly, Arizona, the Cliff-ruins of (C. Mindeleff) 16: 73.

Carvings, Animal, from Mounds of the Mississippi Valley (Henshaw) 2: 117.

Casa Grande, Ariz. (Fewkes) 28: 25.

Casa Grande Ruin (C. Mindeleff) 13: 289.

Catalogue, Illustrated, of a Portion of the Collections Made by the Bureau of Ethnology During the Field Season of 1881 (Holmes) 3: 427.

Catalogue of Collections from New Mexico and Arizona in 1879 (J. Stevenson) 2: 307.

Catalogue of Collections from New Mexico in 1880 (J. Stevenson) 2: 423.

Catalogue of Collections from Pueblos in 1881 (J. Stevenson) 3: 511.

Catalogue of Linguistic Manuscripts in the Library of the Bureau of Ethnology (Pilling) 1: 553.

Central America, Numeral Systems of Mexico and (Thomas) 19: 853.

Central American Picture-writing, Studies in (Holden) 1: 205.

Ceramic Art, Origin and Development of Form and Ornament in (Holmes) 4: 437.

Ceremonial of Hasjelti Dailjis and Mythical Sand Painting of the Navajo (J. Stevenson) 8: 229.

Ceremonialism, Introduction to Zuñi (Bunzel) 47: 467.

Ceremonies; The Zuñi Indians: their Mythology, Esoteric Fraternities and (M. C. Stevenson) 23: 1.

Ceremonies, Tusayan Snake (Fewkes) 16: 267.

Ceremony, the Hako, a Pawnee (A. Fletcher) 22, ii: 5.

Cessions, Indian Land, in the United States (Royce-Thomas) 18: 521.

Cessions of Land by Indian tribes to the United States (Royce) 1: 247.

Cherokee, Myths of the (Mooney) 19: 3.

Cherokee Nation of Indians, the (Royce) 5: 121.

Cherokee, the Sacred Formulas of the (Mooney) 7: 301.

Chickasaw Indians, Social and Religious Beliefs and Usages of the (Swanton) 44: 169.

Chiefs, Rite of the; the Osage Tribe: Sayings of the Ancient Men (La Flesche) 36: 37.

Child-naming Rite, Two Versions of; the Osage Tribe (La Flesche) 43: 23.

Child, Zuñi, the Religious Life of the (T. E. Stevenson) 5: 533.

Children’s Stories, Picurís (Harrington-Roberts) 43: 289.

Chippewa Indians, Uses of Plants by the (Densmore) 44: 275.

Chiriqui, Colombia, Ancient Art of the Province of (Holmes) 6: 3.

Cibola, a Study of Pueblo Architecture of Tusayan and (V. Mindeleff) 8: 3.

Cibola. _See_ Zuñi.

Clans, Tusayan, Localization of (C. Mindeleff) 19: 635.

Cliff-ruins of Canyon de Chelly, Ariz., the (C. Mindeleff) 16: 73.

Codices, Maya, Aids to the Study of the (Thomas) 6: 253.

Coiled Basketry in British Columbia and Surrounding Region (Haeberlin-Teit-Roberts) 41: 119.

Collections, Illustrated Catalogue of, from New Mexico and Arizona in 1879 (J. Stevenson) 2: 307.

Collections, Illustrated Catalogue of, from New Mexico in 1880 (J. Stevenson) 2: 423.

Collections, Illustrated Catalogue of, from Pueblos in 1881 (J. Stevenson) 3: 511.

Collections, Illustrated Catalogue of, Made in 1881 (Holmes) 3: 427.

Colombia, Ancient Art of the Province of Chiriqui (Holmes) 6: 3.

Colorado, Southwestern, Preliminary Account of the Antiquities of the Region Between the Mancos and La Plata Rivers in (Morris) 33: 155.

Comparative Lexicology of the Serian and Yuman Languages (Hewitt) 17: 299*.

Connecticut, Native Tribes and Dialects of; Mohegan-Pequot Diary (Speck) 43: 199.

Contribution, a Further, to the Study of the Mortuary Customs of the North American Indians (Yarrow) 1: 87.

Coronado Expedition, 1540-1542, the (Winship) 14: 329.

Cosmology, Iroquoian (Hewitt) 21: 127; 43: 449.

Crafts of the Guiana Indians, an Introductory Study of the Arts, Customs, and (Roth) 38: 25.

Creation Myths, Zuñi, Outlines of (Cushing) 13: 321.

Creek Confederacy, Social Organization and Social Usages of the Indians of the (Swanton) 42: 23.

Creek Indians, Religious Beliefs and Medical Practices of the (Swanton) 42:473.

=Culin, Stewart.= Games of the North American Indians 24: 3.

Cults, Siouan, a Study of (Dorsey) 11: 351.

Culture, Aboriginal, of the Southeast (Swanton) 42: 673.

Culture Area, a Prehistoric Island, of America (Fewkes) 34: 35.

Culture Growth, Zuñi, Pueblo Pottery as Illustrative of (Cushing) 4: 467.

=Curtin, Jeremiah.= Seneca Fiction, Legends, and Myths, edited by J. N. B. Hewitt 32: 37.

=Cushing, Frank Hamilton.= Outlines of Zuñi Creation Myths 13: 321.

---- Pueblo Pottery as Illustrative of Zuñi Culture Growth 4: 467.

---- Zuñi Fetiches 2: 3.

Customs, Notes on Fox Mortuary, and Beliefs (Michelson) 40: 351.

Customs of the Guiana Indians, an Introductory Study of the Arts, Crafts, and (Roth) 38: 25.

D

=Dall, William H.= On Masks, Labrets, and Certain Aboriginal Customs 3: 67.

Data, Anthropologic, Limitation to the Use of some (Powell) 1: 71.

Day Symbols of the Maya Year (Thomas) 16: 199.

Deaf-Mutes, Sign Language among North American Indians compared with that among Other Peoples and (Mallery) 1: 263.

=Denig, Edwin Thompson.= Indian Tribes of the Upper Missouri: Report to the Hon. Isaac S. Stevens 46: 375.

=Densmore, Frances.= Uses of Plants by the Chippewa Indians 44: 275.

Designs on Prehistoric Hopi Pottery (Fewkes) 33: 207.

Development, Origin and, of Form and Ornament in Ceramic Art (Holmes) 4: 437.

Dialect. _See_ Language.

Dialects of Connecticut, Native Tribes and; Mohegan-Pequot Diary (Speck) 43: 199.

=Dorsey, J. Owen.= Illustration of the Method of Recording Languages 1: 579.

---- Omaha Dwellings, Furniture and Implements 13: 263.

---- Omaha Sociology 3: 205.

---- Osage Traditions 6: 373.

---- Siouan Sociology 15: 205.

---- Study of Siouan Cults 11:351.

Dwellings, Furniture and Implements; Omaha (Dorsey) 13: 263.

E

Eastern Mexico, Certain Antiquities of (Fewkes) 25: 221.

Economics, Primitive, the Wild-rice Gatherers of the Upper Lakes: A Study in American (Jenks) 19: 1013.

Eskimo about Bering Strait (Nelson) 18: 3.

Eskimo, the Central (Boas) 6: 399.

Eskimo. _See_ Alaska; Point Barrow; Ungava District; Yukon.

Esoteric Fraternities, Mythology, and Ceremonies of the Zuñi Indians (M. C. Stevenson) 23: 1.

Esthetology, or the Science of Activities Designed to Give Pleasure (Powell) 19: LV.

Ethnobotany of the Thompson Indians of British Columbia (Teit-Steedman) 45: 441.

Ethnobotany of the Zuñi Indians (M. C. Stevenson) 30: 31.

Ethnogeography of the Tewa Indians, the (Harrington) 29: 29.

Ethnological Results of the Point Barrow Expedition (Murdoch) 9: 3.

Ethnology of the Kwakiutl (Boas-Hunt) 35: 43, 795.

Ethnology of the Ungava District, Hudson Bay Territory (Turner) 11: 159.

Evolution of Language (Powell) 1: 1.

Expedition, Archeological, to Arizona in 1895 (Fewkes) 17: 519.

Expedition, Point Barrow, Ethnological Results of the (Murdoch) 9: 3.

Expedition, the Coronado, 1540-1542 (Winship) 14: 329.

Exploration of the Burton Mound at Santa Barbara, California (Harrington) 44: 23.

Expression; Philology, or the Science of Activities Designed for (Powell) 20: CXXXIX.

F

Face and Body Painting, Tattooing and, of the Thompson Indians, British Columbia (Teit-Boas) 45: 397.

Fetiches, Zuñi (Cushing) 2: 3.

=Fewkes, Jesse Walter.= A Prehistoric Island Culture Area of America 34: 35.

---- Aborigines of Porto Rico and Neighboring Islands 25: 3.

---- Archeological Expedition to Arizona in 1895 17: 519.

---- Casa Grande, Arizona 28: 25.

---- Certain Antiquities of Eastern Mexico 25: 221.

---- Hopi Katcinas, drawn by Native Artists 21: 3.

---- Tusayan Flute and Snake Ceremonies 19: 957.

---- Tusayan Katcinas 15: 245.

---- Tusayan Migration Traditions 19: 573.

---- Tusayan Snake Ceremonies 16: 267.

---- Two Summers’ Work in Pueblo Ruins 22, i: 3.

Fiction, Seneca, Legends, and Myths (Curtin-Hewitt) 32: 37.

=Fletcher, Alice C.= The Hako, a Pawnee Ceremony 22, ii: 5.

=Fletcher, Alice C.=, and =La Flesche, Francis=. The Omaha Tribe 27: 15.

Florida, the Seminole Indians of (MacCauley) 5: 469.

Flute and Snake Ceremonies, Tusayan (Fewkes) 19: 957.

Folklore, Animism and, of the Guiana Indians, an Inquiry into (Roth) 30: 103.

Form and Ornament, Origin and Development of, in Ceramic Art (Holmes) 4: 437.

Formulas, Sacred, of the Cherokees (Mooney) 7: 301.

=Fowke, Gerard.= Archeological Investigations--II 44: 399.

---- Stone Art 13: 47.

Fox Indian Woman, the Autobiography of a (Michelson) 40: 291.

Fox Indians, the Mythical Origin of the White Buffalo Dance of the (Michelson) 40: 23.

Fox Mortuary Customs and Beliefs, Notes on (Michelson) 40: 351.

Fox Society known as “The Singing-around Rite,” Traditional Origin of the (Michelson) 40: 541.

Fox Society known as “Those Who Worship the Little Spotted Buffalo,” Notes on (Michelson) 40: 497.

Fraternities, Esoteric, Mythology, and Ceremonies of the Zuñi Indians (M. C. Stevenson) 23: 1.

Furniture, Dwellings, and Implements, Omaha (Dorsey) 13: 263.

G

Games of the North American Indians (Culin) 24: 3.

=Gann, Thomas.= Mounds in Northern Honduras 19: 655.

=Gatschet, Albert S.= Illustration of the Method of Recording Languages 1: 579.

General Index to the Annual Reports of the Bureau of American Ethnology, 1-48 (1879-1931) (Bonnerjea) 48: 25.

Ghost-dance Religion, the (Mooney) 14: 641.

=Gilmore, Melvin Randolph.= Uses of Plants by the Indians of the Missouri River Region 33: 43.

Guiana Indians, an Inquiry into the Animism and Folklore of the (Roth) 30: 103.

Guiana Indians, an Introductory Study of the Arts, Crafts, and Customs of the (Roth) 38: 25.

H

=Haeberlin, H. K.=, =Teit, J. A.=, and =Roberts, Helen H.= Coiled Basketry in British Columbia and Surrounding Region; under the direction of F. Boas 41: 119.

Hako, the; a Pawnee Ceremony (A. C. Fletcher) 22, ii: 5.

=Harrington, J. P.= Exploration of the Burton Mound at Santa Barbara, California 44: 23.

---- The Ethnogeography of the Tewa Indians 29: 29.

=Harrington, J. P.=, and =Roberts, Helen H.= Picurís Children’s Stories, with texts and songs 43: 289.

Hasjelti Dailji, Ceremonial of, and Mythical Sand Paintings of the Navajo (J. Stevenson) 8: 229.

Hawaiian Romance of Laieikawai, the; with introduction and translation (Beckwith) 33: 285.

=Henshaw, H. W.= Animal Carvings from Mounds of the Mississippi Valley 2: 117.

=Hewitt, J. N. B.= Comparative Lexicology of the Serian and Yuman Languages 17: 299.

---- Iroquoian Cosmology 21: 127.

---- Iroquoian Cosmology, Second Part 43: 449.

---- _Editor._ Indian Tribes of the Upper Missouri; Report to Hon. Isaac S. Stevens (Denig) 46: 375.

---- _Editor._ Seneca Fiction, Legends, and Myths (Curtin) 32: 37.

History, Calendar, of the Kiowa Indians (Mooney) 17: 129.

=Hoffman, W. J.= The Menomini Indians 14: 3.

---- The Midē´wiwin or “Grand Medicine Society” of the Ojibwa 7: 143.

=Holden, E. S.= Studies in Central American Picture-writing 1: 205.

=Holmes, W. H.= A Study of the Textile Art in its Relation to the Development of Form and Ornament 6: 189.

---- Aboriginal Pottery of the Eastern United States 20: 1.

---- Ancient Art of the Province of Chiriqui, Colombia 6: 3.

---- Ancient Pottery of the Mississippi Valley 4: 361.

---- Art in Shell of the Ancient Americans 2: 179.

---- Illustrated Catalogue of a Portion of the Collections made by the Bureau of Ethnology During the Field Season of 1881 3: 427.

---- Origin and Development of Form and Ornament in Ceramic Art 4: 437.

---- Pottery of the Ancient Pueblos 4: 257.

---- Prehistoric Textile Art of Eastern United States 13: 3.

---- Prehistoric Textile Fabrics of the United States derived from Impressions on Pottery 3: 393.

---- Stone Implements of the Potomac-Chesapeake Tidewater Province 15: 3.

Honduras, Northern, Mounds in (Gann) 19: 655.

Hopi Katcinas, Drawn by Native Artists (Fewkes) 21: 3.

Hopi Pottery, Designs on Prehistoric (Fewkes) 33: 207.

Hopi. _See_ Tusayan.

Houses, Navaho (C. Mindeleff) 17: 469.

=Hrdlička, Aleš.= Anthropological Survey in Alaska 46: 19.

Hudson Bay Territory, Ethnology of the Ungava District (Turner) 11: 159.

=Hunt, George.= _See_ Boas, Franz.

I

Illustrated Catalogue of a Portion of the Collections Made by the Bureau of Ethnology During the Field Season of 1881 (Holmes) 3: 427.

Illustrated Catalogue of Collections from New Mexico and Arizona in 1879 (J. Stevenson) 2: 307.

Illustrated Catalogue of Collections from New Mexico in 1880 (J. Stevenson) 2: 423.

Illustrated Catalogue of Collections from Pueblos in 1881 (J. Stevenson) 3: 511.

Illustration of the Method of Recording Indian Languages (Dorsey-Gatschet-Riggs) 1: 579.

Implements, Omaha Dwellings, Furniture, and (Dorsey) 13: 263.

Implements, Stone, of the Potomac-Chesapeake Tidewater Province (Holmes) 15: 3.

Impressions on Pottery, Prehistoric Textile Fabrics of the United States derived from (Holmes) 3: 393.

Index, General, to the Annual Reports of the Bureau of American Ethnology, 1-48 (1879-1931) (Bonnerjea) 48: 25.

Indiana, State of, Cessions of Land by Indian Tribes to the United States, illustrated by those in (Royce) 1: 247.

Industries; Technology, or the Science of (Powell) 20: XXIX.

Inquiry, an, into the Animism and Folklore of the Guiana Indians (Roth) 30: 103.

Institutions; Sociology, or the Science of (Powell) 20: LIX.

Instruction; Sophiology, or the Science of Activities Designed to Give (Powell) 20: CLXXI.

Introduction to Zuñi Ceremonialism (Bunzel) 47: 467.

Introductory Study, an, of the Arts, Crafts, and Customs of the Guiana Indians (Roth) 38: 25.

Investigations, Archeological, II (Fowke) 44: 399.

Iroquoian Cosmology (Hewitt) 21: 127; 43: 449.

Iroquois, Myths of the (Smith) 2: 47.

Island, a Prehistoric, Culture Area of America (Fewkes) 34: 35.

Isleta, New Mexico (Parsons) 47: 193.

J

=Jenks, Albert Ernest.= Wild-rice Gatherers of the Upper Lakes: A Study in American Primitive Economics 19: 1013.

Justice; Sociology, or the Science of Activities Designed for (Powell) 20: LIX.

K

Katcinas, Hopi, Drawn by Native Artists (Fewkes) 21: 3.

Katcinas, Tusayan (Fewkes) 15: 245.

Katcinas, Zuñi (Bunzel) 47: 837.

Kiowa Indians, Calendar History of the (Mooney) 17: 129.

Kwakiutl, Ethnology of the (Boas-Hunt) 35: 43, 795.

L

Labrets, Masks, and Certain Aboriginal Customs (Dall) 3: 67.

=La Flesche, Francis.= The Osage Tribe: Rite of the Chiefs; Sayings of the Ancient Men 36: 37.

---- The Osage Tribe: Rite of the Vigil 39: 31.

---- The Osage Tribe: Rite of the Wa-xo´-be 45: 523.

---- The Osage Tribe: Two Versions of the Child-naming Rite 43: 23.

---- _See_ Fletcher, A. C., and La Flesche, F.

La Plata, Preliminary Account of the Antiquities of the Region Between, and the Mancos Rivers in Southwestern Colorado (Morris) 33: 155.

Laieikawai, the Hawaiian Romance of, with introduction and translation (Beckwith) 33: 285.

Land Cessions, Indian, in the United States (Royce-Thomas) 18: 521.

Land, Cessions of, by the Indian Tribes of the United States, Illustrated by Those in the State of Indiana (Royce) 1: 247.

Language, Evolution of (Powell) 1: 1.

Language; Philology, or the Science of (Powell) 20: XXXIX.

Language, Sign, Among the North American Indians, Compared with that Among Other Peoples and Deaf-Mutes (Mallery) 1: 263.

Languages, Illustration of the Method of Recording Indian (Dorsey-Gatschet-Riggs) 1: 579.

Legends, Seneca Fiction, Myths, and (Curtin-Hewitt) 32: 37.

Lexicology, Comparative, of the Serian and Yuman Languages (Hewitt) 17: 299*.

Life, Religious, of the Zuñi Child (M. C. Stevenson) 5: 533.

Limitation to the Use of Some Anthropologic Data (Powell) 1: 71.

Linguistic Families, Indian, of America North of Mexico (Powell) 7: 1.

Linguistic Manuscripts in the Library of the Bureau of Ethnology, Catalogue of (Pilling) 1: 553.

List of Annual Reports of the Bureau of American Ethnology with an Index to Authors and Titles (Bonnerjea) 48: 1185.

List of Publications of the Bureau of American Ethnology 16: CI; 17: LXXV; 28: I; 30: 387.

Little Spotted Buffalo, Those who Worship the, Notes on the Fox Society Known as (Michelson) 40: 497.

Localization of Tusayan Clans (C. Mindeleff) 19: 635.

M

=MacCauley, Clay.= The Seminole Indians of Florida 5: 469.

=McGee, W. J.= Primitive Numbers 19: 821.

---- The Seri Indians 17: 1.

---- The Siouan Indians 15: 153.

=McGee, W. J.=, and =Muñiz, M. A.= Primitive Trephining in Peru 16: 3.

Maine, Texts from; Wawenock Myths (Speck) 43: 165.

=Mallery, Garrick=, Pictographs of the North American Indians; a Preliminary Paper 4: 3.

---- Picture-writing of the American Indians 10: 3.

---- Sign Language Among North American Indians Compared with that Among Other Peoples and Deaf-Mutes 1: 263.

Mancos, Preliminary Account of the Antiquities of the Region Between the, and La Plata Rivers in Southwestern Colorado (Morris) 33: 155.

Manuscripts, Linguistic, in the Library of the Bureau of Ethnology, Catalogue of (Pilling) 1: 553.

Manuscripts, Notes on Certain Mayan and Mexican (Thomas) 3: 3.

Masks, Labrets, and Certain Aboriginal Customs (Dall) 3: 67.

=Matthews, Washington.= Navajo Silversmiths 2: 167.

---- Navajo Weavers 3: 371.

---- The Mountain Chant; a Navajo Ceremony 5: 379.

Maya and Mexican Manuscripts, Notes on Certain (Thomas) 3: 3.

Maya Codices, Aids to the Study of the (Thomas) 6: 253.

Maya Year, Day Symbols of the (Thomas) 16: 199.

Mayan Calendar Systems (Thomas) 19: 693; 22, i: 197.

Medical Practices, Religious Beliefs and, of the Creek Indians (Swanton) 42: 473.

Medicinal Practices, Mohegan, Weather-lore and Superstitions (Speck-Tantaquidgeon) 43: 264.

Medicine-Men of the Apache (Bourke) 9: 443.

Menomini Indians, the (Hoffman) 14: 3.

Method of Recording Indian Languages, Illustration of the (Dorsey-Gatschet-Riggs) 1: 579.

Mexican and Mayan Manuscripts, Notes on Certain (Thomas) 3: 3.

Mexico and Central America, Numeral Systems of (Thomas) 19: 853.

Mexico, Eastern, Certain Antiquities of (Fewkes) 25: 221.

Mexico, North of, Indian Linguistic Families of America (Powell) 7: 1.

=Michelson, Truman.= Notes on Fox Mortuary Customs and Beliefs 40: 351.

---- Notes on the Fox Society Known as “Those who worship the Little Spotted Buffalo” 40: 497.

---- Preliminary Report on Linguistic Classification of Algonquian Tribes 28: 221.

---- The Autobiography of a Fox Indian Woman 40: 291.

---- The Mythical Origin of the White Buffalo Dance of the Fox Indians, Together with Four Minor Sacred Packs Appertaining to the Ceremony 40: 23.

---- The Traditional Origin of the Fox Society known as “Singing-around Rite” 40: 541.

Middle Tennessee, Two Prehistoric Villages in (Myer) 41: 485.

Midē´wiwin, or “Grand Medicine Society” of the Ojibwa, the (Hoffman) 7: 143.

Migration Traditions, Tusayan (Fewkes) 19: 573.

=Mindeleff, Cosmos.= Aboriginal Remains in Verde Valley, Arizona 13: 179.

---- Casa Grande Ruin 13: 289.

---- Cliff-ruins of Canyon de Chelly, Arizona 16: 73.

---- Localization of Tusayan Clans 19: 635.

---- Navaho Houses 17: 469.

---- Repair of Casa Grande Ruin in 1891 15: 315.

=Mindeleff, Victor.= A Study of Pueblo Architecture: Tusayan and Cibola 8: 3.

Mississippi Valley, Ancient Pottery of the (Holmes) 4: 361.

Mississippi Valley, Animal Carvings from Mounds of the (Henshaw) 2: 117.

Missouri River Region, Uses of Plants by Indians of the (Gilmore) 33: 43.

Mohegan Medicinal Practices, Weather-lore and Superstition (Speck-Tantaquidgeon) 43: 264.

Mohegan-Pequot Diary (Speck) 43: 199.

=Mooney, James.= Calendar History of the Kiowa Indians 17: 129.

---- Myths of the Cherokee 19: 3.

---- Sacred Formulas of the Cherokee 7: 301.

---- The Ghost-Dance Religion, with a Sketch of the Sioux Outbreak of 1890 14: 641.

=Morris, Earl H.= Preliminary Account of the Antiquities of the Region between the Mancos and La Plata Rivers in Southwestern Colorado 33: 155.

Mortuary Customs, Notes on Fox, and Beliefs (Michelson) 40: 351.

Mortuary Customs of the North American Indians (Yarrow) 1: 87.

Mound Explorations of the Bureau of (American) Ethnology (Thomas) 12: 3.

Mounds, Burial, of the Northern Sections of the United States (Thomas) 5: 3.

Mounds in Northern Honduras (Gann) 19: 655.

Mounds of the Mississippi Valley, Animal Carvings from (Henshaw) 2: 117.

Mountain Chant, a Navajo Ceremony (Matthews) 5: 379.

=Muñiz, M. A.=, and =McGee, W. J.= Primitive Trephining in Peru 16: 3.

=Murdoch, John.= Ethnological Results of the Point Barrow Expedition 9: 3.

---- _Editor._ Ethnology of the Ungava District, Hudson Bay Territory (Turner) 11: 159.

=Myer, William Edward.= Indian Trails of the Southeast 42: 727.

---- Two Prehistoric Villages in Middle Tennessee 41: 485.

Mythical Origin, the, of the White Buffalo Dance of the Fox Indians (Michelson) 40: 23.

Mythical Sand Paintings of the Navajo Indians, Ceremonial of Hasjelti Dailjis and (J. Stevenson) 8: 229.

Mythology, Esoteric Fraternities and Ceremonies of the Zuñi Indians (M. C. Stevenson) 23: 1.

Mythology of the North American Indians, Sketch of the (Powell) 1: 17.

Mythology, Tsimshian (Boas-Tate) 31: 29.

Myth Texts from Maine, Wawenock (Speck) 43: 165.

Myths of the Cherokee (Mooney) 19: 3.

Myths of the Iroquois (Smith) 2: 47.

Myths, Seneca Fiction, Legends and (Curtin-Hewitt) 32: 37.

Myths, Zuñi Creation, Outlines of (Cushing) 13: 321.

Myths, Zuñi Origin (Bunzel) 47: 545.

N

Native Tribes and Dialects of Connecticut; Mohegan-Pequot Diary (Speck) 43: 199.

Navaho Houses (C. Mindeleff) 17: 469.

Navajo Ceremony, The Mountain Chant, a (Matthews) 5: 379.

Navajo Indians, Ceremonial of Hasjelti Dailjis and Mythical Sand Paintings of the (J. Stevenson) 8: 229.

Navajo Silversmiths (Matthews) 2: 167.

Navajo Weaver (Matthews) 3: 371.

=Nelson, E. W.= The Eskimo about Bering Strait 18: 3.

New Mexico, Illustrated Catalogue of Collections from, in 1879 (J. Stevenson) 2: 307.

New Mexico, Illustrated Catalogue of Collections from, in 1880 (J. Stevenson) 2: 423.

New Mexico, Illustrated Catalogue of Collections from, in 1881 (J. Stevenson) 3: 511.

New Mexico, Isleta (Parsons) 47: 193.

Notes on Certain Maya and Mexican Manuscripts (Thomas) 3: 3

Notes on Fox Mortuary Customs and Beliefs (Michelson) 40: 351.

Notes on Fox Society Known as “Those Who Worship the Little Spotted Buffalo” (Michelson) 40: 497.

Numbers, Primitive (McGee) 19: 821.

Numeral Systems of Mexico and Central America (Thomas) 19: 853.

O

Ojibwa, the Midē´wiwin or “Grand Medicine Society” of the (Hoffman) 7: 143.

Ojibwa. _See_ Chippewa.

Omaha Dwellings, Furniture and Implements (Dorsey) 13: 263.

Omaha Sociology (Dorsey) 3: 205.

Omaha Tribe, the (Fletcher-La Flesche) 27: 15.

On Limitations to the Use of some Anthropologic Data (Powell) 1: 71.

On Masks, Labrets and certain Aboriginal Customs, with an Inquiry into the Bearing of their Geographical Distribution (Dall) 3: 67.

On the Evolution of Language as Exhibited in the Specialization of the Grammatic Processes, the Differentiation of the Parts of Speech, and the Integration of the Sentence; from a Study of the Indian Languages (Powell) 1: 1.

Opinions; Sophiology, or the Science of (Powell) 20: CLXXI.

Organization, Social, and Social Usages of the Indians of the Creek Confederacy (Swanton) 42: 23.

Origin and Development of Form and Ornament in Ceramic Art (Holmes) 4: 437.

Origin Myths, Zuñi (Bunzel) 47: 545.

Origin, the Traditional, of the Fox Society Known as “The Singing-around Rite” (Michelson) 40: 541.

Ornament, Origin and Development of Form and, in Ceramic Art (Holmes) 4: 437.

Osage Traditions (Dorsey) 6: 373.

Osage Tribe, the, Rite of the Chiefs; Sayings of the Ancient Men (La Flesche) 36: 37.

Osage Tribe, the, Rite of Vigil (La Flesche) 39: 31.

Osage Tribe, the, Rite of the Wa-xo´-be (La Flesche) 45: 523.

Osage Tribe, the, Two Versions of the Child-naming Rite (La Flesche) 43: 23.

Outbreak, Sioux, of 1890, and the Ghost-dance Religion (Mooney) 14: 641.

P

Painting, Tattooing and Face and Body, of the Thompson Indians, British Columbia (Teit-Boas) 45: 397.

=Parsons, Elsie Clews.= Isleta, New Mexico 47: 193.

Pawnee Ceremony, the Hako, a (A. C. Fletcher) 22, ii: 5.

Pequot. _See_ Mohegan-Pequot.

Peru, Primitive Trephining in (Muñiz-McGee) 16: 3.

Philology, or the Science of Activities designed for Expression (Powell) 20: CXXXIX.

Pictographs of the North American Indians (Mallery) 4: 3.

Picture-writing of the North American Indians (Mallery) 10: 3.

Picture-writing, Studies in Central American (Holden) 1: 205.

Picurís Children’s Stories (Harrington-Roberts) 43: 289.

=Pilling, James Constantine.= Catalogue of Linguistic Manuscripts in the Library of the Bureau of Ethnology 1: 553.

Pima Indians, the (Russell) 26: 3.

Places and Place Names. _See_ Ethnogeography.

Plants, Uses of, by the Chippewa Indians (Densmore) 44: 275.

Plants, Uses of, by the Indians of the Missouri River Region (Gilmore) 33: 43.

Plants. _See_ Ethnobotany.

Plateaus, Western, the Salishan Tribes of the (Teit-Boas) 45: 23.

Pleasure; Esthetology, or the Science of Activities designed to give (Powell) 19: LV.

Poetry, Zuñi Ritual (Bunzel) 47: 611.

Point Barrow Expedition, Ethnological Results of the (Murdoch) 9: 3.

Porto Rico and Neighboring Islands, Aborigines of (Fewkes) 25: 3.

Potomac-Chesapeake Tidewater Province, Stone Implements of the (Holmes) 15: 3.

Pottery, Aboriginal, of the Eastern United States (Holmes) 20: 3.

Pottery, Ancient, of the Mississippi Valley (Holmes) 4: 361.

Pottery, Designs on Prehistoric Hopi (Fewkes) 33: 207.

Pottery of the Ancient Pueblos (Holmes) 4: 257.

Pottery; Prehistoric Textile Fabrics of the United States, derived from Impressions on (Holmes) 3: 393.

Pottery, Pueblo, a Study of, as illustrative of Zuñi Culture Growth (Cushing) 4: 467.

=Powell, J. W.= Esthetology, or the Science of Activities designed to give Pleasure 19: LV.

---- Indian Linguistic Families of America North of Mexico 7: 1.

---- On Activital Similarities 3: LXV.

---- On Limitations to the Use of some Anthropologic Data 1: 71.

---- On Regimentation 15: CIV.

---- On the Evolution of Language 1: 1.

---- Philosophy, or the Science of Activities designed for Expression 19: CXXXIX.

---- Sketch of the Mythology of the North American Indians 1: 17.

---- Sociology, or the Science of Institutions 20: LIX.

---- Sophiology, or the Science of Activities designed to give Instruction 20: CLXXI.

=Powell, J. W.= Technology, or the Science of Industries 20: XXIX.

---- Wyandot Government: a Short Study of Tribal Society 1: 57.

Practices, Medical, Religious Beliefs and, of the Indians of the Creek Confederacy (Swanton) 42: 473.

Prehistoric Island Culture Area of America (Fewkes) 34: 35.

Prehistoric Hopi Pottery, Designs on (Fewkes) 33: 207.

Prehistoric Textile Fabrics of the United States derived from Impressions on Pottery (Holmes) 3: 393.

Prehistoric Villages, Two, in Middle Tennessee (Myer) 41: 485.

Preliminary Account of the Antiquities of the Region between the Mancos and La Plata Rivers in Southwestern Colorado (Morris) 33: 155.

Primitive Numbers (McGee) 19: 821.

Primitive Trephining in Peru (Muñiz-McGee) 16: 3.

Publications, List of, of the Bureau of (American) Ethnology 16: CI; 17: LXXV; 28: I; 30: 387.

Pueblo Architecture, a Study of: Tusayan and Cibola (V. Mindeleff) 8: 3.

Pueblo Pottery as illustrative of Zuñi Culture Growth (Cushing) 4: 467.

Pueblo Ruins, Two Summers’ Work in (Fewkes) 22, i: 3.

Pueblos, Ancient, Pottery of the (Holmes) 4: 257.

R

=Radin, Paul.= The Winnabago Tribe 37: 35.

Recording Indian Languages, Illustration of the Method of (Dorsey-Gatschet-Riggs) 1: 579.

Regimentation, on (Powell) 15: CIV.

Religion, the Ghost-dance, with a Sketch of the Sioux Outbreak of 1890 (Mooney) 14: 641.

Religious and Social Beliefs and Usages of the Chickasaw Indians (Swanton) 44: 169.

Religious Life of the Zuñi Child (M. C. Stevenson) 5: 533.

Report on the Mound Exploration of the Bureau of Ethnology (Thomas) 12: 3.

Report, Preliminary, on the Classification of Algonquian Tribes (Michelson) 28: 221.

Report to the Hon. Isaac S. Stevens on the Indian Tribes of the Upper Missouri (Denig-Hewitt) 46: 375.

Reports, Annual, General Index to the, of the Bureau of American Ethnology, 1-48 (1879-1931) (Bonnerjea) 48: 25.

Reports, Annual, List of (Bonnerjea) 48: 1185.

Result, Ethnological, of the Point Barrow Expedition (Murdoch) 8: 3.

=Riggs, Stephen R.= Illustration of the Method of Recording Indian Languages 1: 579.

Rite, Child-naming, Two Versions of the, the Osage Tribe (La Flesche) 43: 23.

Rite of the Chiefs; the Osage Tribe; Sayings of the Ancient Men (La Flesche) 36: 37.

Rite of the Wa-xo´-be; the Osage Tribe (La Flesche) 45: 523.

Rite of Vigil; the Osage Tribe (La Flesche) 39: 31.

Rite, Singing-around, the Traditional Origin of the Fox Society known as (Michelson) 40: 541.

Ritual Poetry, Zuñi (Bunzel) 47: 611.

=Roberts, Helen H.=, =Haeberlin, H. K.=, and =Teit, J. A.= Coiled Basketry in British Columbia and surrounding Region; under the direction of F. Boas 41: 119.

=Roberts, Helen H.=, and =Harrington, J. P.= Picurís Children’s Stories; with texts and songs 43: 289.

Romance, the Hawaiian, of Laieikawai, with introduction and translation (Beckwith) 33: 289.

=Roth, Walter E.= An Inquiry into the Animism and Folklore of the Guiana Indians 30: 103.

---- An Introductory Study of the Arts, Crafts, and Customs of the Guiana Indians 38: 25.

=Royce, C. C.= Cessions of Lands by Indian Tribes of the United States, illustrated by those in the State of Indiana 1: 247.

---- Indian Land Cessions in the United States 18: 521.

---- The Cherokee Nation of Indians 5: 121.

Ruin, Casa Grande (C. Mindeleff) 13: 289.

Ruin, Casa Grande, Repair of, in 1891 (C. Mindeleff) 15: 315

Ruin. (_See also_ Twenty-eighth Annual Report.)

Ruins, Cliff, of Canyon de Chelly (C. Mindeleff) 16: 73.

Ruins, Pueblo, Two Summers’ Work in (Fewkes) 22, i: 3.

=Russel, Frank.= The Pima Indians 26: 3.

S

Sacred Packs, Four Minor, the Mythical Origin of the White Buffalo Dance of the Fox Indians together with (Michelson) 40: 23.

Sacred Formulas of the Cherokees (Mooney) 7: 301.

Salishan Tribes, the, of the Western Plateaus (Teit-Boas) 45: 23.

Sand Paintings of the Navajo Indians, Mythical; and Ceremonial of Hasjelti Dailjis (J. Stevenson) 8: 229.

Santa Barbara, California, Exploration of the Burton Mound at (Harrington) 44: 23.

Sayings of the Ancient Men; the Osage Tribe; Rite of the Chiefs (La Flesche) 36: 37.

Seminole Indians of Florida, the (MacCauley) 5: 469.

Seneca Fiction, Legends, and Myths (Curtin-Hewitt) 32: 37.

Seri Indians, the (McGee) 17: 1.

Serian and Yuman Languages, Comparative Lexicology of (Hewitt) 17: 299*.

Shell, Art in, of the Ancient Americans (Holmes) 2: 179.

Sia, the (M. C. Stevenson) 11: 3.

Sign Language among the North American Indians, compared to that among other Peoples and Deaf-Mutes (Mallery) 1: 263.

Singing-around Rite, the Traditional Origin of the Fox Society known as (Michelson) 40: 541.

Silversmiths, Navajo (Matthews) 2: 167.

Similarities, Activital (Powell) 3: LXV.

Siouan Cults, a Study of (Dorsey) 11: 351.

Siouan Indians, the (McGee) 15: 153.

Siouan Sociology (Dorsey) 15: 205.

Sioux Outbreak of 1890, and the Ghost-dance Religion (Mooney) 14: 641.

Sketch of the Mythology of the North American Indians (Powell) 1: 17.

Sketch of the Sioux Outbreak of 1890, and the Ghost-dance Religion (Mooney) 14: 641.

=Smith, Erminnie A.= Myths of the Iroquois 2: 47.

Snake and Flute Ceremonies, Tusayan (Fewkes) 19: 957.

Snake Ceremonies, Tusayan (Fewkes) 16: 267.

Social and Religious Beliefs and Usages of the Chickasaw Indians (Swanton) 44: 169.

Social Organization and Social Usages of the Indians of the Creek Confederacy (Swanton) 42: 23.

Society, Fox, known as “Those who worship the Little Spotted Buffalo,” Notes on (Michelson) 40: 497.

Sociology, Omaha (Dorsey) 3: 250.

Sociology, or the Science of Institutions (Powell) 20: LIX.

Sociology, Siouan (Dorsey) 15: 205.

Sophiology, or the Science of Activities Designed to Give Instruction (Powell) 20: CLXXI.

Southeast, Aboriginal Culture of the (Swanton) 42: 673.

Southeast, Indian Trails of the (Myer) 42: 727.

Southwestern Colorado, Preliminary Account of the Antiquities of the Region between the Mancos and La Plata Rivers (Morris) 33: 155.

=Speck, Frank G.= Native Tribes and Dialects of Connecticut; Mohegan-Pequot Diary 43: 199.

---- Wawenock Myth Texts from Maine 43: 165.

=Steedman, Elsie Viault=, _Editor_. Ethnobotany of the Thompson Indians (Teit) 45: 441.

=Stevens, Hon. Isaac S.=, Report to, on the Indian Tribes of the Upper Missouri (Denig-Hewitt) 46: 375.

=Stevenson, James.= Ceremonial of Hasjelti Dailjis and Mythical Sand Painting of the Navajo Indians 8: 229.

---- Illustrated Catalogue of Collections obtained from the Indians of New Mexico and Arizona in 1879 2: 307.

---- Illustrated Catalogue of Collections obtained from the Indians of New Mexico in 1880 2: 423.

---- Illustrated Catalogue of Collections obtained from the Pueblos of Zuñi, New Mexico and Wolpi, Arizona, in 1881 3: 511.

=Stevenson, Matilda Coxe.= Ethnobotany of the Zuñi Indians 30: 31.

---- The Religious Life of the Zuñi Child 5: 533.

---- The Sia 11: 3.

---- The Zuñi Indians, their Mythology, Esoteric Fraternities, and Ceremonies 23: 1.

=Stevenson, Tilly E.= _See_ Stevenson, Matilda Coxe.

Stone Art (Fowke) 13: 47.

Stone Implements of the Potomac-Chesapeake Tidewater Province (Holmes) 15: 3.

Stories, Picurís Children’s (Harrington-Roberts) 43: 289.

Studies in Central American Picture-writing (Holden) 1: 205.

Study of Maya Codices, Aids to the (Thomas) 6: 253.

Study of Siouan Cults (Dorsey) 11: 351.

Summers’ Work, Two, in Pueblo Ruins (Fewkes) 22, i: 3.

Superstitions, Mohegan Medicinal Practices, Weather-lore, and (Speck-Tantaquidgeon) 43: 264.

Survey, Anthropological, in Alaska (Hrdlička) 46: 19.

=Swanton, John R.= Aboriginal Culture of the Southeast 42: 673.

---- Religious Beliefs and Medical Practices of the Creek Indians 42: 473.

---- Social and Religious Beliefs and Usages of the Chickasaw Indians 44: 169.

---- Social Organization and Social Usages of the Indians of the Creek Confederacy 42: 23.

---- The Tlingit Indians 26: 391.

Symbols, Day, of the Maya Year (Thomas) 16: 199.

T

=Tantaquidgeon, Gladys.= Mohegan Medicinal Practices, Weather-lore, and Superstitions 43: 264.

Tattooing and Face and Body Painting of the Thompson Indians, British Columbia (Teit-Boas) 45: 397.

Technology, or the Science of Industries (Powell) 20: XXIX.

=Teit, James A.= Ethnobotany of the Thompson Indians of British Columbia, edited by Elsie V. Steedman 45: 441.

=Teit, James A.= Tattooing and Face and Body Painting of the Thompson Indians, edited by F. Boas 45: 397.

---- The Salishan Tribes of the Western Plateaus, edited by F. Boas 44: 23.

Tennessee, Middle, Two Prehistoric Villages in (Myer) 41: 485.

Textile Art, a Study of, in its Relation to the Development of Form and Ornament (Holmes) 6: 189.

Textile Art, Prehistoric, of the United States (Holmes) 13: 3.

Textile Fabrics, Prehistoric, of the United States (Holmes) 3: 393.

Tewa Indians, the Ethnogeography of the (Harrington) 29: 29.

=Thomas, Cyrus.= Aids to the Study of the Maya Codices 6: 253.

---- Burial Mounds of the Northern Sections of the United States 5: 3.

---- Day Symbols of the Maya Year 16: 199.

---- Introduction to Indian Land Cessions (Royce) 18: 521.

---- Mayan Calendar Systems 19: 693; 22, i: 197.

---- Notes on Certain Maya and Mexican Manuscripts 3: 3.

---- Numeral Systems of Mexico and Central America 19: 853.

Thompson Indians, British Columbia, Ethnobotany of the (Teit-Steedman) 45: 441.

Thompson Indians, Tattooing and Face and Body Painting of the (Teit-Boas) 45: 397.

Tidewater Province, Potomac-Chesapeake, Stone Implements of the (Holmes) 15: 3.

Tlingit Indians, the (Swanton) 26: 391.

Traditional Origin, the, of the Fox Society known as “the Singing-around Rite” (Michelson) 40: 541.

Traditions, Osage (Dorsey) 6: 373.

Traditions, Tusayan Migration (Fewkes) 19: 573.

Trephining, Primitive, in Peru (Muñiz-McGee) 16: 3.

Tribal Society, a Short Study of; Wyandot Government (Powell) 1: 57.

Tribe, the Omaha (Fletcher-La Flesche) 27: 15.

Tribe, the Osage; Rite of the Chiefs; Sayings of the Ancient Men (La Flesche) 36: 37.

Tribe, the Osage; Rite of the Wa-xo´-be (La Flesche) 45: 523.

Tribe, the Osage; Two Versions of the Child-naming Rite (La Flesche) 43: 23.

Tribe, the Winnebago (Radin) 37: 35.

Tribes, Algonquian, Preliminary Report on Classification of (Michelson) 28: 221.

Tribes, Indian, of the Upper Missouri; Report to the Hon. Isaac S. Stevens (Denig-Hewitt) 46: 375.

Tribes, Native, and Dialects of Connecticut; Mohegan-Pequot Diary (Speck) 43: 199.

Tribes, the Salishan, of the Western Plateaus (Teit-Boas) 45: 23.

=Turner, Lucien M.= Ethnology of the Ungava District, Hudson Bay Territory 11: 159.

Tusayan and Cibola, Architecture of (V. Mindeleff) 8: 3.

Tusayan Clans, Localization of (C. Mindeleff) 19: 635.

Tusayan Flute and Snake Ceremonies (Fewkes) 19: 957.

Tusayan Katcinas (Fewkes) 15: 245.

Tusayan Migration Traditions (Fewkes) 19: 573.

Tusayan Snake Ceremonies (Fewkes) 16: 267.

Two Prehistoric Villages in Middle Tennessee (Myer) 41: 485.

Two Summers’ Work in Pueblo Ruins (Fewkes) 22, i: 3.

Two Versions of the Child-naming Rite; the Osage Tribe (La Flesche) 43: 23.

U

Ungava District, Hudson Bay Territory, Ethnology of the (Turner) 11: 159.

Upper Lakes, Wild-rice Gatherers of the; a Study in American Primitive Economics (Jenks) 19: 1013.

Upper Missouri, Indian Tribes of the; Report to the Hon. Isaac S. Stevens (Denig-Hewitt) 46: 375.

Usages, Social and Religious Beliefs and, of the Chickasaw Indians (Swanton) 44: 169.

Usages, Social, and Social Organization of the Indians of the Creek Confederacy (Swanton) 42: 23.

Uses of Plants by the Chippewa Indians (Densmore) 44: 275.

Uses of Plants by the Indians of the Missouri River Region (Gilmore) 33: 43.

V

Verde Valley, Aboriginal Remains in (C. Mindeleff) 13: 179.

Vigil, Rite of; the Osage Tribe (La Flesche) 39: 31.

Villages, Two Prehistoric, in Middle Tennessee (Myer) 41: 485.

W

Wawenock Myth Texts from Maine (Speck) 43: 165.

Wa-xo´-be, Rite of the; the Osage Tribe (La Flesche) 45: 523.

Weather-lore, Mohegan Medicinal Practices, Superstitions, and (Speck-Tantaquidgeon) 43: 264.

Weavers, Navajo (Matthews) 3: 371.

Welfare; Technology, or the Science of Activities designed for (Powell) 20: XXIX.

West Indies. _See_ Porto Rico.

Western Plateaus, the Salishan Tribes of the (Teit-Boas) 45: 23.

=White, Leslie A.= The Acoma Indians 47: 17.

White Buffalo Dance, the Mythical Origin of the, of the Fox Indians (Michelson) 40: 23.

Wild-rice Gatherers of the Upper Lakes; a Study in American Primitive Economics (Jenks) 19: 1013.

Winnebago Tribe, the (Radin) 37: 35.

=Winship, George P.= The Coronado Expedition, 1540-1542 14: 329.

Wolpi, Arizona, Illustrated Catalogue of Collections from, in 1881 (J. Stevenson) 3: 511.

Work, Two Summers’, in Pueblo Ruins (Fewkes) 22, i: 3.

Wyandot Government; a Short Study of Tribal Society (Powell) 1: 57.

Y

=Yarrow, H. C.= A Further Contribution to the Study of the Mortuary Customs of the North American Indians 1: 87.

Yuman and Serian Languages, Comparative Lexicology of (Hewitt) 17: 299*.

Z

Zuñi Ceremonialism, Introduction to (Bunzel) 47: 467.

Zuñi Child, the Religious Life of the (M. C. Stevenson) 5: 533.

Zuñi Creation Myths, Outlines of (Cushing) 13: 321.

Zuñi Culture Growth, Pueblo Pottery as illustrative of (Cushing) 4: 467.

Zuñi Fetiches (Cushing) 2: 3.

Zuñi Indians, Ethnobotany of the (M. C. Stevenson) 30: 31.

Zuñi Indians; their Mythology, Esoteric Fraternities, and Ceremonies (M. C. Stevenson) 23: 1.

Zuñi Katcinas (Bunzel) 47: 837.

Zuñi Origin Myths (Bunzel) 47: 545.

Zuñi Ritual Poetry (Bunzel) 47: 611.

Zuñi, N. Mex., Illustrated Catalogue of Collections from, in 1881 (J. Stevenson) 3: 511.

Zuñi, New Mexico. _See_ Cibola; Coronado.

[Transcriber’s Note:

Inconsistent spelling and hyphenation are as in the original.

“Obituary” entry in the TOC, page 27, is an apparent error as the referenced page does not exist.]