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.
[Illustration]
[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.]