• Tidak ada hasil yang ditemukan

AMERICAN ETHNOLOGY

N/A
N/A
Protected

Academic year: 2023

Membagikan "AMERICAN ETHNOLOGY"

Copied!
40
0
0

Teks penuh

(1)

Cv

SMITHSONIAN INSTITUTION

Ij

O^ BTJREAXJ OF AlVIERICAN^ KTHNOLOG-Y

vV BULLETIN 49

LIST OF PUBLICATIONS

,^

OF THE BUREAU OF

AMERICAN ETHNOLOGY

WITH INDEX TO

AUTHORS AND TITLES

(SECOND IMPRESSION)

8

WASHINGTON

GOVERNMENT PRINTING OFFICE

AUGUST,1911

(2)
(3)

SMITHSONIAN INSTITUTION

BXJRE^^XJ OF T^MERIC^VN ETHNOLO&Y

BULLETIN

49

LIST OF PUBLICATIONS

OF THE BUREAU OF

AMERICAN ETHNOLOGY

WITH INDEX TO

AUTHORS AND TITLES

(SECOND IMPRESSION)

WASHINGTON

GOVERNMENT PRINTING OFFICE

AUGUST,19H

(4)
(5)

LIST OF PUBLICATIONS OF THE BUREAU OF AMERICAN ETHNOLOGY

NOTE

The publications

of

the Bureau

of

Ameiican Etlmology

consist of

Contributions

to

North American Etlmology, Amiual Reports, Bulle- tms. Introductions, and

JVIiscellaneous

Pubhcations.

The

series of

Contributions,

in

quarto, was begun

in

1877 by the Geographical and Geological Survey

of

the Rocky Mountam Region

(J.

W. Powell,

director).

Of the earher numbers, printed under

autliority of special resolutions of

Cpngress, volumes

i, ii (in

two

parts),

and

iii

had been completed when,

in

the year 1879, the Bureau

of

Etlmology was organized, with

J.

W. Powell

as director.

In March, 1881, the pubhcation

of

volumes

vi, vii, viii, ix,

and x was authorized by concurrent resolution

of

Congress, but the

series

was discontmued

in 1895, after

volumes

ito vii

and ix had been completed.

The publication

of

the Annual Reports

in

royal octavo form began with that

for

the

fiscal

year ending June

30,

1880. Until 1895 the successive reports were each authorized by Congress, usually by con- current

resolution; since

that time they have been published under

autliority of

the law providmg

for

the prmting and binding and the

distribution of

public documents, approved January

12, 1895.

At the

close of

the

fiscal

year 1910-11, twenty-six Aimual Reports had appeared

(the

Fourteenth, Seventeenth, Eighteenth, Nineteenth, and Twenty-second, each

in

two

parts), in all,

thirty-one volumes.

The Twenty-seventh Report

isin

the bindery and the Twenty-eighth

in i)i-e})aration.

The present maximum

edition of

the Annual Reports

is

9,850

copies.

Of these the Senate

receives 1,500,

the House

of

Represent-

atives 3,000,

and the Bureau

of

American Ethnology 3,500

copies.

From the remammg 1,850 copies are drawn the

j)ersonal

copies

of

Senators, Representatives, and Delegates, and 500 copies

for distri-

bution

to

Government

libraries

and

to

designated public depositories^

throughout the country. The remamder are

sold

by the Superin- tendent

of

Documents, Government Printing

Office, at

a

shglit

advance on the

cost.

In August,

1886,

the

director of

the bureau was authorized by

joint resolution of

Congress to begin the

j)ublicati(m of

a

series of

1Each Senator, Ui'iirosontativc,and Delegatein Congressiscntltlod to designateonedepositoryto receiveallpublicdocuinents(secaanualreportsoftheSuperintendentofDocuments, UovernnieulPrinting Ollice)

(6)

4 BUREAU OF AMERICAN ETHNOLOGY

[bull.49

bulletins,

wMcli were issued

in

octavo form and

in

paper

covers,

and in July,

1888,

the continuation

of

the

series

was authorized by concur- rent

resolution.

Provision

for

publishing the bulletms was omitted from the public printing law

of

Jan.

12,

1895, and the

issue

termi- nated

in

1894. Up

to

that time 24

bulletins

had been published. By

concurrent

resolution in April,

1900, Congress authorized the resump-

tion of

the Bulletin

seriesin

royal octavo form. Nos.

25, 26,

and 27 were issued under

this provision,

and

in

February, 1903, by

joint resolution of

Congress the octavo form was again resumed. Smce then bulletms

28, 29,

30 (m two

parts), 31, 32, 33, 34, 35, 36, 37, 38, 39,

40

(part 1),41, 42, 43, 44, 45, 48, 49, 50,

and 51 have appeared, while Nos. 40

(part 2), 46,

and 47 are m

press.

The maximum

edi-

tion

of

the Bulletin

seriesis

9,850

copies, of

which the Senate

receives 1,500,

the House

of

Kepresentatives

3,000,

and the Bureau

of

Ameri- can Ethnology 3,500

copies.

The remaining 1,850 copies

are dis-

tributed by the Superintendent

of

Documents, Government Printing

Office.

Of these about 500 copies are sent

to

designated

libraries;

the

rest

are held by him

for sale at

a

price slightly

above

cost.

Besides the

series

mentioned there have been issued small

editions of

four Introductions and

of eight

Miscellaneous Publications, intended wholly or

chiefly for

the use

of

collaborators and

corre-

spondents. These were not

specially

authorized by Congress, but

as

a

rule

were paid

for

from the annual appropriations

for

contmuing

researches.

With the exception

of

the few copies

of

the pubHcations

of

the bureau disposed

of

by the Superintendent

of

Documents the

editions

are distributed

free of

charge. The quota allowed the bureau

is

distributed mamly

to libraries

and

institutions of

learning and

to

collaborators and others engaged

in

anthropological research

or in

mstruction.

Annual Reports

First

aimual report

of

the Bureau

of

Ethnology

to

the secretary

of

the Smithsonian Institution 1879-80 by

J.

W. Powell

director [Vignette]

Washington Government Printing

Office

1881

Roy.

8°.

XXXV, 603

p.,

347

fig. (inch

54 pL), map. Out of

'print.

ReportoftheDirector. P.xi-xxxiii.

On

the evolutionoflanguage,asexhibitedinthespecialization ofthegrammatic processes,thedifferentiation of theparts of speech,

and

the integrationofthe sentence;fromastudyofIndianlanguages,

by

J.

W.

Powell. P. 1-16.

SketchofthemythologyoftheNorth

American

Indians,

by

J.

W.

Powell. P. 17-56.

Wyandot

government: a shortstudyoftribal society,

by

J.

W.

Powell. P.57-69.

On

limitations tothe useof

some

anthropologicdata,

by

J.AV.Powell. P. 71-86.

A

furthercontributiontothestudyofthemortuary customsoftheNorth American Indians,

by

Dr.

H.

C.Yarrow,act.asst.surg.,U.S.

Army.

P. 87-203,fig.1-47.

StudiesinCentral

American

picture-writing,

by Edward

S. Holden, professorof

mathematics,U.S.NavalObservatory. P. 205-245,fig.48-60.

(7)

LIST OF PUBLICATIONS 5

Cessionsoflandby Indiantribos(oIhoUnited States: illustrated

by

thoseinthe stateofIndiana,

by

('. ('.Royco. P.247-262,map.

Signlanguage

among

NorthAmerican Indianscompared with that

among

other peoplesanddeafmutes,

by

Garrick Mallery. P.263-552,fig.61-342a, 3426-346.

Catalogue of linguistic manuscripts in the library of the P>ureau of Ethnology,

by

James('. Pilling. P. 553-577.

Illustration ofthe

method

ofrecordingIndianlanguages.

From

themanuscripts

ofMessrs.J.O. Dorsey, A.S.Gatschet, andS. II.Riggs. P.579-589.

Index. P.591-603.

Second annuul report

of

the Bureau

of Etlinoloo;}- to tlie

secretary

of tliewSmitlt-sonian

Institution ISSO-Sl by

J.

W. Powell

director [Vignette]

Washington Government Printing Odice 1S83

[1884]

Koy.

8°.

xxxvii, 477

}).,

77

pi., fig.

1-35, 347-714 (382

of tjiese

forming 98

pi.), 2

maps. Out of

print.

ReportoftheDirector. P.xv-xx.wii.

Zuiii fetiches,

by

FrankIlamiltonCushing. P.3-45,pi.i-xi,fig.1-3.

Myths

oftheIroquois,

by

ErminnieA.Smith. P. -47-116,pi.xii-xv.

Animal

carvingsfrom

mounds

of theMississippi valley,

by Henry W. Henshaw.

P. 117-166,fig.4-35.

Navajosilversmiths,

by

Dr.Washington Matthews, U.S.

Army.

P. 167-178, pi.

xvi-xx.

Artin shell of theancientAmericans,

by

William

H.

Holmes. P. 179-305, pi.

XXI-LXXVII.

Illustratedcatalogueof thecollectionsobtainedfromtheIndiansof

New

Mexico and Arizonain 1879,

by

JamesStevenson. P.307-422,fig.347-697,

map.

Illustratedcatalogueofthecollectionsobtainedfrom theIndiansof

New

Mexico in 1880,

by

JamesStevenson. P.423-465,fig.698-714,

map.

Index. P. 467-477.

Third annual report

of

the Bureau

of

Ethnology

to

the secretary

of

the Smithsonian Institution 1881-82

b}^ J.

W. Powell

director [Vignette]

Washington Government Printing

Oflice

1884

[1885]

Roy.

8°.

Lxxiv, 606

p.,

44

pi.,

200 (+

2

umiumbered)

fig.

Out ofpnnt.

ReportoftheDirector. P. xiii-i.xxiv.

On

activital similarities. P.lxv-lxxiv.

Notes on certain

Maya

and Mexican manuscripts,

by

Prof. Cyrus Thomas. P.

3-65,pi. i-iv, fig.1-10.

On

masks,labrets, andcertainaboriginalcustoms,withaninquiryintothe bear- ing of theirgeographicaldistribution,

by

William HealeyDall, assistantU. S.

CoastSurvey; honorarycuratorU.S.National

Museum.

P.67-202,pi.v-xxix.

Omaha

sociology,

by

Rev.J.

Owen

Dorsey. P.205-370,pi.xxx-xxxiii,fig.12^2.

Navajoweavers,

by

Dr.Washington Matthews, U. S.A. P.371-391, pi.

xxxiv-

XXXVIII, fig.42-59.

Prehistoric textile fabrics oftheUnitedStates, derivedfromimpressionsonpot- tery,

by

WilliamH. Holmes. P.393-425,pi.xxxix,fig.60-115.

Illustratedcatalogueofa portion of thecollections

made by

the BureauofEth- nology during the field season of 1881,

by

William

H.

Holmes. P. 427-510,

fig. 116-200.

Illustratedcatalogue of the eollectioris obtained from the pueblosof Zufii,

New

Mexico, and Wolpi, Arizona, in 1881,

by

James Stevenson. P. 511-594, pi.

XL-XI.IV.

Index. P. 595-606.

(8)

6 BUREAU OF AMEEICAN ETHNOLOGY

[bull.49

Fourth annual report

of

the Bureau

of

Ethnology

to

the secretary

of

the Smithsonian Institution 1882-83 by

J.

W. Powell

director [Vignette]

Washington Government Printing

Office

1886

[1887]

Roy.

8°.

Lxm, 532

p.,

83 pL, 565

fig.

Out of

print.

ReportoftheDirector. P.xxvii-lxiii.

Pictographsof the North

American

Indians.

A

preliminary paper,

by

Garrick Mallery. P.3-256,pi.

I-Lxxxm,

fig.1-111,llla-209.

Potteryoftheancient Pueblos,

by

William

H.

Holmes. P. 257-360,fig.210-360.

Ancientpottery of the Mississippi valley,

by

William

H.

Holmes. P. 361-436,

fig. 361-463.

Origin

and

development of form

and

ornament inceramic art,

by

William

H.

Holmes. P.437-465, fig.464-489.

A

studyofPueblopotteryas illustrative ofZuniculture growth,

by

Frank

Ham-

iltonGushing. P.467-521,fig.490-564.

Indexto

accompanying

papers. P.523a-532.

Fifth annual report

of

the Bureau

of

Ethnology

to

the secretary

of

the Smithsonian Institution 1883-84 by

J.

W. Powell

director [Vignette]

Washington Government Printing

Office

1887

[1888]

Roy.

8°. Liii,

564

p.,

23

pi. (inch

2 pocket maps), 77

fig.

Out of

iwint.

ReportoftheDirector. P. xvii-liii.

Burial

mounds

of the northern sections of the United States,

by

Prof. Cyrus Thomas. P. 3-119,pi. i-vi, fig.1-49.

The

Cherokee Nation of Indians: a narrative of their officialrelations with the colonial

and

federalgovernments,

by

CharlesC. Royce. P. 121-378, pi. vii- IX (pi.VIII

and

ixarepocketmaps).

The mountain

chant: a Navajo ceremony,

by

Dr.Washington Matthews, U. S.

Army.

P. 379-467,pi. x-xviii,fig.50-59.

The

SeminoleIndiansof Florida,

by

ClayMacCauley. P.469-531, pi. xix, fig.

60-77.

The

religious lifeoftheZunichild,

by

Mrs. TillyE. Stevenson. P. 533-555,pi.

XX-XXIII.

Index. P. 557-564.

Sixth annual report

of

the Bureau

of

Ethnology

to

the secretary

of

the Smithsonian Institution 1884-85 by

J.

W. Powell

director [Vignette]

Washington Government Printing

Office

1888

[1889]

Roy.

8°. LViii,

675

p. (inch 6 p. of

music), 10

pi. (incl. 2

pocket maps), 546

fig.,

44 small unnumbered

cuts.

Out of

'print.

ReportoftheDirector. P.xxiii-lviii.

Ancientart of the province of Chiriqui, Colombia,

by

William

H.

Holmes. P.

3-187,pi.I,fig.1-285.

A

studyofthetextile art initsrelationtothedevelopmentofform

and

ornament,

by

William H. Holmes. P. 189-252,fig.286-358.

Aidstothestudyofthe

Maya

codices,

by

Prof. Cyrus Thomas. P. 253-371, fig.

359-388.

Osagetraditions,

by

Rev. J.

Owen

Dorsey. P. 373-397, fig.389.

The

Central Eskimo,

by

Dr. FranzBoas. P. 399-669,pi. ii-x, fig. 390-546(pi.

IIandHIarepocketmaps).

Index. P.671-675.

(9)

LIST OF PUBLICATIONS

7"

Seventli annual report

of

tho Bureau

of

Ethnology

to

the secretary

of

the Smithsonian Institution 1885-86 by

J,

W. Powell

director [Vi<i:nette] Wasliinjj:ton

Government

Printinc?

Of

lice

1891

[1892]

Roy.

8°. XLiii,

409

p.,

27

pi. (inch

pocket map), 39

fig.

Out of

lyrdnt.

Reportol" thoDirector. P.

xv-xm.

Indianlinguistic familicH ofAmericanorthof Afexico,

by

J.

W.

Powell. P.1-142, pi.I(pocketmap).

The

Mide'wiwinor"grand medicinesociety"of the Oji])wa,

by W.

J.Hoffman.

P. 1-13-:W)0,pi. n-xxiii,fig. 1-39.

The

sacred formulasoftheC'herokees,

by

.TamesMooney. P..301-397, pi.xxiv- xxvir.

Index. P. 399-409.

Eighth annual report

of

the Bureau

of

Ethnology

to

the secretary

of

the Smithsonian

Inslit

utiou 1886-87 by

eT.

W. Powell

director [Vignette]

Wasliington Government Printing Odice 1891

[1893]

Roy.

8°.

XXXVI, 298

p.,

123

pi.,

118

fig.

Out of

print.

ReportoftheDirector. P.xiir-xxxvi.

A

study ofPueblo architecture: Tusayan and Cibola,

by

Victor Mindeleff. P.

.3-228, pi. i-cxi, fig. 1-114.

CeremonialofHasjelti Dailjisand mythical sandpaintingoftheNavajoIndians,

by

JamesStevenson. P.229-285, pi.cxn-cxxni, fig. 115-118.

Index. P.287-298.

Ninth annual

rei)ort of

the Bureau

of

Ethnology

to

the secretary

of

the Smithsonian Institution 1887-88 by

J.

W. Powell

director [Vignette]

Wasliington Government Printing Ofhce 1892

[1893]

Roy.

8°.

XLVi, 617

p.,

8

pi.,

448

fig.

Out of

print.

ReportoftheDirector. P.xix-xlvi.

Ethnologicalresults ofthePointBarrowexpedition,

by

John Murdoch,naturalist and observer. International Polarexpedition to Point Barrow, Alaska, 1881- 1883. P. 3-441,pi. i-ii, fig. 1-428.

The

medicine-men ofthe Apache,

by

John G. Bourke, captain, third cavalry,

IJ. S.

Army.

P.443-G03,pi. iir-viii, fig.429-448.

Index. P.605-617.

Tenth annual

rc})ort of

the Bureau

of

Ethnology

to

the secretary

of

the Smithsonian

Institution

1888-89 by

J.

W. Powell

director [Vignette]

Wa-sliington Government Printing

Oliice

1893

[1894]

Roy.

8°.

XXX, 822

p.,

54

pi.,

1291

fig.,

116 small unnumbered

cuts.

Out of

)>rint.

ReportoftheDirector. P. iii-xxx.

Picture-writing of the American Indians,

by

CJarrick Mallery. P. 3-807, pi.

i-Liv, fig. 1-145, 145a-1290.

Index. P.809-822.

(10)

8 BUREAU OF AMERICAN ETHNOLOGY

[bull,49

Eleventh annual report

of

the Bureau

of

Ethnology

to

the secretary

of

the Smithsonian Institution 1889-90 by

J.

W. Powell

director [Vignette]

Wasliington Government Printing

Office 189-4

Roy.

8°. XLVii,

553

p.,

50

pi.,

200

fig.

Out of

print.

ReportoftheDirector. P. xxi-xlvii.

The

Sia,

by

MatildaCoxe Stevenson. P. 3-157,pi.i-xxxv,fig. 1-20.

Bthnologyofthe

Ungava

district,

Hudson Bay

territory,

by

Lucien

M.

Turner.

[Edited

by

John Murdoch] P. 159-350, pi.xxxvi-xliii, fig.21-155.

A

studyof Siouan cults,

by James Owen

Dorsey. P. 351-544, pi. xliv-l, fig.

156-200.

Index. P. 54&-553.

Twelfth annual report

of

the Bureau

of

Ethnology

to

the secretary

of

the Snfithsonian Institution 1890-91 by

J.

W. Powell

director [Vignette]

Washington Government Printing

Office

1894

Poy.

8°. XLViii,

742

p.,

42

pi.,

344

fig.

Out of

ijrint.

ReportoftheDirector. P.xix-xlvii.

Reportonthe

mound

explorationsoftheBureauofEthnology,

by

Cyrus Thomas.

P. 3-730,pi.i-XLii, fig. 1-344.

Index. P. 731-742.

Thirteenth annual report

of

the Bureau

of

Ethnology

to

the

secre-

tary

of

the Snfithsonian Institution 1891-92 oj

J.

W. Powell

director [Vignette]

Washington Government Printing

Office

1896

Roy.

8°. Lix,

462

p.,

60

pi.,

330

fig.

Out of

iwint.

ReportoftheDirector. P. xix-lix.

Prehistoric textile art of Eastern United States,

by

"William

Henry

Holmes.

P. 3^6,pi. i-ix,fig.1-28.

Stoneart,

by

GerardFowke. P. 47-178,fig.29-278.

AboriginalremainsinVerdevalley, Arizona,

by

Cosmos Mindeleff. P. 179-261.

pi.x-L, fig. 279-305.

Omaha

dwellings, furniture,

and

implements,

by

James

Owen

Dorsey. P. 263- 288,fig. 306-327.

CasaGranderuin,

by

CosmosMindeleff. P.289-319,pi.li-lx, fig.328-330.

OutlinesofZufii creationmyths,

by Frank

HamiltonGushing. P.321-447.

Index. P.449-462.

Fourteenth annual report

of

the Bureau

of

Ethnology

to

the

secre-

tary

of

the Smithsonian Institution 1892-93 by

J.

W. Powell

director

In two parts — part

1 [-2] [Vignette]

Waslungton Gov-

ernment Printing

Office

1896

[1897]

Roy.

8°.

Two

parts, lxi,

1-637; 639-1136

p.,

122 ph, 104

fig.

Out of

print.

ReportoftheDirector. P.xxv-lxi.

The Menomini

Indians,

by

Walter

James

Hoffman,

M.

D. P. 3-328,pi.i-xxxvii

fig. 1-55.

The

Coronado expedition, 1540-1542,

by

George Parker Winship. P. 329-613, pi. XXXVIII-LXXXIV.

Indextopart1. P.615-637.

The

Ghost-dance religionand the Sioux outbreak of 1890,

by

James Mooney.

P.641-1110, pi.Lxxxv-cxxii, fig. 56-104.

Indextopart2. P.1111-1136.

a

(11)

LIST OF PUBLICATIONS 9 Fifteenth annual report

of

the Bureau

of

Ethnok)gy

to

the secretary

of

the Smithsonian Institution

]

803-'94 by

J.

W. Powell director

[Vignette]

Washin<2:ton Govei-nnient

Printin*:; Office

1897

Roy.

8°.

cxxi, 366

p., frontispiece,

125

pi.,

49

fig.

Out of

piint.

ReportoftheDii-ector. P.xv-cxxi.

On

rogimentation. P.civ-cxxi.

Stone implements of the Potomac-Chesapeake tidewater province,

by

^\'illiam

Henry

Holmes. P. 3-152, pi. i-ciiiandfrontispiece, fig. l-29a.

The

Siouan Indians; apreliminary sketch,

by W

J

McGee.

P. 153-204.

Siouan sociology: a posthumous paper,

by James Owen

Dorsey. P. 205-244,

fig. 30-38.

Tusayankatcinas,

by

JesseWalter Fewkes. P.245-313,pi. civ-cxi, fig.39-48.

The

repairof Casa

Grande

ruin, Arizona, in 1891,

by

CosmosMindeleff. P.315- 349, pi. cxii-cxxv.

Index. P. 351-36G.

Sixteenth annual

re])ortof

the Bureau

of

American Ethnolof^y

to

the secretary

of

the Smithsonian Institution 1894-'95 by

J.

W.

Powell

director [Viunette]

Washington Government Printing

Office

1897

^

Roy.

8°.

cxix, 326

p., 81 pi.,

83

fig.

Out of print

ReportoftheDirector. P. xiii-cxix.

ListofpublicationsoftheBureauofAmerican Ethnology. P. ci-cxix.

Primitive trephiningin Peru,

by Manuel

Antonio Mufiiz and

W

J

McGee.

P.

3-72, pi. i-xL.

The

cliff-ruinsof

Canyon

de Chelly, Arizona,

by

CosmosMindeleff. P. 73-198, pi. Lxi-Lxiii,fig. 1-83.

Day

symbolsofthe

Maya

year,

by

Cyrus Thomas. P. 199-2(15, pi.lxiv-lxix.

Tusayan snakeceremonies,

by

JesseWalterFewkes. P.267-312,pi. lxx-lxxxi.

Index. P.313-326.

Seventeenth amiual report

of

the Bureau

of

American Ethnology

to

the

.

secretary

of

the Smithsonian Institution 1895-96 by

J.

W.

Powell director In two parts —

i^art 1 [-2]

[Mgnette] Waslimg-

ton Government Printing

Office

1898

[part 1, 1900,

part

2,

1901]

Roy.

8°.

Two

parts,

xcv, 1-128, 129*-344*, 129-468; 465-752

p.,

182

pi.,

357

fig.

Out of

pririt.

ReportoftheDhector. P. xxv-xciii.

List ofpublicationsoftheBureau ofAmerican Ethnology. P. lxxv-xciii.

The

Seri Indians,

by W

J

McGee.

P. 1-128, 129*-344*, pi. i-ma, Iii6.iva, i\h, va, v6, via,vi6, viia, vii6-ixa, ix6-lvi,fig. 1-42.

Comparativelexicology,

by

J.N. B.Hewitt. P.299*-344*.

Calendarhistoryof the

Kiowa

Indians,

by James

Mooney. P» 129-445,pi.lvii- Lxxxi,fig.43-229.

Indextopart1. P.447-468.

Navaho

houses,

by

CosmosMindeleff. P.469-517, pi. Lxxxii-xc,fig.230-244.

Archeological expedition to Arizona in 1895,

by

JesseWalterFewkes. P.519- 744,pi. xcia,xci6-cLxxv, fig.245-357.

Indextopart2. P.745-752.

Eighteenth annual report

of

the Bureau

of

American Ethnology

to

the secretary

of

the Smithsonian Institution 1896-97 by

J.

W.

100931°—Bull.

49—11

9

(12)

10 BUREAU OF AMERICAN ETHNOLOGY

[bull 49

Powell

director

In two parts--part

1 [-2] [Vij^nette]

Washington Government Printing

Office

1899

[part 1,

1901, part

2,

1902]

Roy.

8°.

Two

parts, lvii,

1-518; 519-997

p.,

174 pL, 165

fig.

Out of

print.

ReportoftheDirector. P.xxlu-lvii.

The Eskimo

about Bering strait,

by Edward

William Nelson. P. 3-518, pi.i- cvii, fig.1-165.

Indian land cessions in the UnitedStates, compiled

by

CharlesC.Royce, with anintroduction

by

CyrusThomas. P.521-964, pi.cviii-clxxiv.

Index. P.965-997.

Nineteenth annual report

of

the Bureau

of

American Ethnology

to

the secretary

of

the Smithsonian Institution 1897-98 by

J.

W.

Powell director In two parts — part

1 [-2] [\^ignette]

Washington Government Printmg

Office

1900

[1902]

Roy.

8°.

Two

parts, xcii,

1-568, 569*-576*; 569-1160

p.,frontis- piece,

80

pi.,

49

fig.

Out of

print.

ReportoftheDirector. P. ix-xcii, frontispiece.

Esthetology, or the science of activities designedtogive pleasure. P.Lv- xcii.

Myths

oftheCherokee,

by James

Mooney. P. 3-548, pi.i-xx, fig.1-2.

Indextopart1. P.549-568, 569*-576*.

Tusayanmigrationtraditions,

by

Jesse AValterFewkes. P.573-633.

Localizationof Tusayanclans,

by

CosmosMindeleff. P. 635-653,pi.xxi-xxviii,

fig.3.

Mounds

innorthern Honduras,

by Thomas

Gann. P.655-692, pi.

xxix-xxxix-

fig.4-7.

Mayan

calendar systems,

by

Cyrus Thomas. P.693-819, pi. XL-XLiiia, XLinfe- XLiv,fig.8-17a, 176-22.

Primitivenumbers,

by W

J

McGee.

P.821-851.

Numeral

systems of Mexico

and

Central America,

by

Cyrus

Thomas.

P.853, 955, fig.23-41.

Tusayan Flute and Snake ceremonies,

by

JesseWalter Fewkes. P. 957-1011, pi. XLv-Lxv,fig.42^6.

The

wild-rice gatherersof the upper lakes, astudyin American primitiveeco- nomics,

by

AlbertErnest Jenks. P. 1013-1137, pi.lxvi-lxxix, fig.47—48.

Indextopart2. P. 1139-1160.

Twentieth annual report

of

the Bureau

of

American Etlmology to the secretary

of

the Smitlisonian Institution 1898-99 by

J.

W.

Powell

director [Vignette]

Washington GoA^ernment Printing

Office

1903

Roy.

8°.

ccxxiv, 237

p.,

180

pi.,

79

fig.

Out of

print.

ReportoftheDirector. P.vii-ccxxiii.

Technology, orthe scienceof industries. P.xxix-lvii.

Sociology, orthe scienceofinstitutions. P. lix-cxxxviii.

Philology, orthe scienceof activitiesdesignedforexpression. P.

cxxxix-

CLXX.

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

CLXXI-CXCVII.

List ofpublicationsofthe

Bureau

of

American

Ethnology. P.cxcix-ccxxiii.

(13)

LIST OF PUBLICATIONS 11

Aboriuinal potteryof the eiLstern United States, by

W.

11. Holmes. P. 1-201,

])!. l-LXXVIII,

LXXVIH

A, LXXIX-LXXIXB, LXXX-CLXXVII, fig. 1-79.

Index.

Twenty-fii-st

annual

re})ort of

the

Biiieaii of

American Ethnolo<ry

to

the secretary

of

the Smithsonian Institution 1899-1900 by

J.

W.

Powell

director [Vignette]

Washington (iovenunent Printing

Office

1903

Roy.

8°.

XL, 360

p.,

69

})1.

Out of

print.

ReportoftheDirector. P. vii-xl, pi. i.

Hopi

kateiuas,

drawn by

nativeartist*;,

by

Jesse Waller Fewkes. P. 3-lL>(j, pi.

II-LXIII.

Iroquoiancosmology,

by

J. N. B.llewitt. P. 127-313!), pi. lxiv-lxix.

Index.

Twenty-second annual report

of

the Bureau

of

AnuMican Ethnology

to

the secretary

of

the Smithsonian Institution 1900-1901

J.

W.

Powell

director

In two parts — part

1 [-2] [Vignette]

Washing-

ton Government Printing

Office 1

903

Roy.

8°.

Two

parts,

xliv, 1-320; 1-372

p., 91 pi.,

178

fig.

Out of

print.

ReportoftheActing Director. P. vii-xliv.

Two

summers'workinpuebloruins,

by

JesseWalter Fewkes. P. 3-195,pi.i-lxx,

fig. 1-120.

Mayan

calendar systems. II,

by

Cyrus Thomas. P. 197-305, pi. lxxi-lxxxii,

fig. 121-168.

Indextopart1.

The

ilako, a

Pawnee

ceremony,

by

AliceC. Fletcher,holderof

Thaw

fellowship,

Peabody Museum,

HarvardUniversity. P. 5-368,pi.lxxxiii-xci,fig.169-178.

Indextopart2.

Twenty-third annual report

of

the Bureau

of

American Ethnology

to

the secretary

of

the Smithsonian Institution 1901-2

J.

W.

Powell

director

[Mgnette] Washington Government Printing

Office

1904

[1905]

Roy.

8°.

xlv, 634

p.,

139

pi.,

34

fig.

Out of

print.

ReportoftheActing Director. P. vii-xlv.

The

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

by

MatildaC'oxeStevenson. P. 1-608.

Index.

Twenty-fourth annual report

of

the Bureau

of

American Ethnology

to

the secretary

of

the Smithsonian Institution 1902-3 W.

II.

Holmes,

Chief. [Vignette]

Washington Government Printing

Office

1907

Roy.

8°.

XL, 846

p., 21 ])1.,

1112 hg. Out of

print.

Reportof theChief. P. vn-xi..

Games

oftheNorth AmericanIndians,

by

Stewart Culin. P.3-809.

Index.

(14)

12 BUREAU OF AMERICAN ETHNOLOGY

[bull.49

Twenty-fifth annual report

of tlic

Bureau

of

American

Etlinolo<2;y

to the secretary

of

the Smithsonian Institution 1903-4

[Vignette]

Washington Government Printing

Office

1907

lioy. 8°.

XXIX, 296

p.,

129 pL, 70

fig.

Out of

print.

Reportof theChief. P. ix-xxix.

The

aboriginesof PortoRico

and

neighboringislands,

by

JesseWalter Fewkes.

P. 3-220,pi. i-xciii, fig.1-43.

Certain antiquities of eastern Mexico,

by

Jesse Walter Fewkes. P. 221-284, pi.xciv-cxxix,fig.44-70.

Index.

Twenty-sixth annual report

of

the Bureau

of

American Ethnology to the secretary

of

the Smithsonian Institution 1904-5 [Vignette]

Washington Government Printing

Office

1908 Koy.

8°.

XXXI, 512

p.,

58 pL, 117

fig.

Out of

print.

ReportoftheChief. P. vii-xxxi.

The Pima

Indians,

by

FrankRussell. P. 3-389,pi. i-xlvii,fig. 1-102.

The

Tlingit Indians,

by John

R. Swanton. P. 391-485, pi. xlviii-lviii, fig.

103-117 Index.

In Press

Twenty-seventh annual report

of

the Bureau

of

American Ethnol- ogy to the secretary

of

the Smithsonian Institution 1905-G

[Vi-

gnette] Washington Government Printing

Office

1911

Roy

8°.

P. 672, 65 pL, 132

fig.

ReportoftheChief. P.5-14.

The Omaha

Tribe,

by

AliceC.Fletcher,holderofthe

Thaw

fellowship,

Pcabody Museum,

Ilarvard University,

and

Francis

La

Flesche, a

member

ofthe

Omaha

tribe. P. 15-654.

Index.

In Preparation

Twenty-eighth annual report

of

the Bureau

of

American Ethnology to the secretary

of

the Smithsonian Institution 1906-7

[Vignette]

Washington Government Printing

Office

1911 Roy.

8°.

Reportofthe Ethnologist-in-charge.

CasaGrande,Arizona,

by

JesseWalter Fewkes.

Preliminary reportonthelinguistic classification ofAlgouquiantribes,

by Truman

Michelson.

Bulletins

(1).

Bibliography

of

the Eskimo language by James (\uistantine

Pilling

1887

8°. V,

116

p. (inch

8

p. of facsimiles).

(2),

Perforated stones from

California

by Henry W. llenshaw 1887

8°.

34

p.,

16

fig.

(15)

LIST OF PUBLICATIONS" 13

(3).

The use

of

gold and other metals among the ancient inhabit- ants

of Chiriqni,

Isthmus

of

Daiien by William

II.

Holmes 1887

8°.

27

p.,

22

fig.

(4).

Work

in

nioimd exploration

of

the Bureau of Ethnology by Cyrus Thomas 1887

8°.

15

p., 1 fig.

(5).

Bibliography

of

the Siouan languages by James Constantine

Pilling

1887

8°. V,

87

p.

(6).

Bibliography

of

the Iroquoian languages by James C.

Pilling

18SS

[1889]

8°. VI,

208

p. (inch

4

p. facsimiles), 5

urmumbered

facsimiles.

Out of

lyrint.

(7).

Textile

fabrics of

ancient Peru by William

II.

Holmes 1889

8°.

17

p., 11 fig.

(8).

The problem

of

the Ohio mounds by Cyrus Thomas 1889

8°.

54

p., 8 fig.

(9).

Bibliography

of

the Muskliogean languages by James Con- stantine

Pilling

1889

8°. V,

114

p.

Out of print

(10).

The

circular,

square, and octagonal earthworks

of

Ohio by Cyrus Thomas 1889

8°.

35

p., 11

pL,

5 fig.

Out of

print.

(11).

Omaha and Ponka

letters

by James Owen Dorsov 1891

8°.

127

p.

Out of

print.

(12).

Catalogue

of prehistoric

works east

of

the Rocky mountains by Cyrus Thomas 1891

8°.

246

p.,

17

pi.

and maps. Out of

print.

(13).

Bibliography

of

the Algonquian languages by James Con- stantine

Pilling

1891

[1892]

8°. X,

614

p.,

82

facsimiles.

Out of

print.

(14).

Bibliography of the Athapascan languages by James Con- stantine

Pilling

1892

8°. XIII,

125 p

(inch

4

p. facsimiles).

Out of

print.

(15).

Bibliography

of

the Chinookan languages (including the Chi- nook jargon) by James Constantine

Pilling

1893

8°. XIII,

81

p. (inch 3 p.facsimiles).

Out of

print.

(16).

Bibliography

of

the Salishan languages by James Constan-

tine Pilling

1883

8°. XIII,

86

p. (incl.

4

p. facsimiles).

Out of

print.

(17).

The Pamunkey Indians

of

Virginia by Jno. Garland Pollard 1S94

8°.

19

p.

Out of

print.

(18).

The :Maya year by Cyrus Thomas 1894

8°.

64

p., 1 pi.

Out of

print.

(16)

14 BUREAU OF .AMERICAN ETHNOLOGY

[bull.49

(19).

Bibliography

of

the Wakashan

lanf'uages

by James Con- stantine

Pilling

1894

8°. XI,

70

p. (inch 2 p.facsimiles).

(20).

Chinook texts by Franz Boas 1894

[1895]

8°.

278

p., 1 pi.

Out of

print.

(21).

An ancient quarry

in

Indian Territory by William Henry Holmes 1894

8°.

19

p., 12

pi,

7 fig.

Out of

print.

(22).

The Siouan

tribes of

the East by James Mooney 1894

[1895]

8°.

101

p.,

map. Out of

print.

(23).

Ai-cheologic investigations

in

James and Potomac valleys by Gerard Fowke 1894

[1895]

8°.

80

p.,

17

fig.

Out of

print.

(24).

List

of

the publications

of

the Bureau

of

Ethnology, with index

to

authors and subjects by Frederick Wel)b Hodge 1894

8°.

25

p.

Out of

print.

(25).

Natick dictionary by James Hammond Trumbull 1903 Koy.

8°.

XXVIII, 349

p.

(26).

Kathlamet texts by Franz Boas 1901 Roy.

8°.

261

p., 1 pi.

(27).

Tsimshian

texts

by Franz Boas 1902 Roy.

8°.

244

p.

(28).

Mexican and Central American

antiquities,

calendar systems and history twenty-four papers by Eduard

vSeler,

E. Forstemann, Paul Schellhas, Carl Sapper, and E. P. Dieseldorff translated from the German under the supervision

of

Charles P. Bowditch 1904

8°.

682

p.,

49

pi.,

134

fig.

(29).

Haida

texts

and myths by John R. Swanton 1905 Roy.

8°.

448

p., 5 fig.

(30).

Handbook

of

American Indians north

of

Mexico edited

l)y

Frederick Webb Hodge

Pt. 1

1907

Pt. 2

1910

8°. Pt. 1 IX,

972

p.,

many

figures,

map.

Pt. 2 iv,

1221

p.,

many

figures.

Out of

print.

(31).

List

of

publications

of

the Bureau

of

American Ethnology, with index

to

authors and

titles

1906

8°.

31

p.

Out of

print.

(32).

Antiquities

of

the Jemez plateau, New Mexico by Edgar L. Hewett 1906

8°.

55

p.,

17 pL, 31

fig.,

map.

(33).

Skeletal remains suggesting or attributed

to early

man

in

North America by Ales Hrdlicka 1907

8°.

113

p.,

21 pL, 16

fig.

(34).

Physiological and medical observations among the Indians

of

southwestern United States and northern Mexico by Ale§

Hrdhcka 1908

8°. IX,

460

p.,

28

pi., 2 fig.

(17)

List of pttbltcations 15

(35).

Antiquities

of

the

ui)i)or

Gila and Salt River

valleys in

Arizona and New Mexico by Walter Hough 1907

8°.

96

p., 11 pi., 51 fig.,

map.

(36).

List

of

the

})ul)lications of

the Bureau

of

American Eth- nology, with index

to

authors and

titles

1907

8°.

31

p.

Out of

print.

(37). Anticjuities of central

and southeastern Missouri by Gerard Fowke (Report on explorations made

in

1906-07 under the auspices

of

the Archaeological

Institute of

America) 1910

8°. VII,

116

p., 19 pi.,

20

fig.

(38).

Unwritten

literature of

Hawaii The sacred songs

of the

hula compiled and

translated,

with notes and an account

of the

hula by Nathaniel B. Emerson, A.

:M., :M.

D. 1909

8°.

288

p.,

24

pi., 3 fig., 14

musical

pieces

(39).

Thngit myths and

texts

by John R. Swanton 1909

8°. VIII,

451

p.

(40).

Handbook

of

American Indian languages by Franz Boas Part

1

With

illustrative

sketches by Roland B. Dixon [Maidul, P. E.

Goddard Uithapascan:

Ilupa],

William Jones, revised by Truman Michelson [Algonquian], John R. Swanton

[Tlingit, Ilaidal,

William Thalbitzer [Eskimo]; [Franz Boas: Introduction, Chinook, Kwakiutl, Tsimsliian; John R. Swanton and Franz Boas, Siouan] 1911

8°. VII,

1069

p.

(41),

Antiquities

of

the Mesa Verde National Park: Spruce-tree House by

J.

Walter Fewkes 1909

8°. VIII,

57

p.,

21

pi.,

37

fig.

(42).

Tuberculosis among

certain

Indian

tribes of

the United States by Ale§ Hrdlicka 1909

8°. VII,

48

p.,

22 pL .... ^

(43).

Indian

tribes of the

lower

ISIississippi

valley and adjacent coast

of

the Gulf

of

Mexico by John R. Swanton 1911

8°. VII,

387

p.,

32

pi.

(inchuhng

1

map),

2 fig.

(44).

Indian languages

of

Mexico and Central America, and

their

geographical

distribution

by Cyrus Thomas,

assLsted

by John R.

Swanton Accompanied with a

linguistic

map 1911

8°. VII,

108

p., 1

map

(45).

Chippewa music by Frances Densmo

re

1910

8°.

XIX, 216

p., 12 {)!., 8 fig.,

many musical

])ieces

(48).

The Choctaw

of

Bayou I^acomb,

St.

Tammany

parish,

Louisiana by DaA'id

I.

Buslmell,

Jr.

1909

8°.

37

p.,

22

pi., 1 fig.

(49).

List

of the

publications

of

the Bureau

of

American Ethnology, with index

to

authors and

titles

1910

8°.

32

p.

(Sec(md impression

1911,

34

p.)

(18)

16 BUREAU OF AMERICAN ETHNOLOGY

Ibill.49

(50).

Preliminary report on a

visit to

the Navaho National Monu- ment, Arizona by Jesse Walter Fewkes 1911

8°. VII, 35,

22 pi; 3

fig.

(51).

Antiquities

of

the Mesa Verde National Park:

Cliff

Palace by Jesse Walter Fewkes 1911

"^8°.

82

p.,

35

pi., 4 fig.

In Press

(46).

Choctaw dictionary by Cyrus Byington edited by John R.

Swanton

(47).

A dictionary

of

the Biloxi and Ofo languages, accompanied with thirty-one Biloxi

texts

and numerous Biloxi phrases by James Owen Dorsey and John R. Swanton

In Preparation

(40).

Handbook

of

American Indian languages by Franz Boas Part

2

With

illustrative

sketches

(52).

Early man

in

South America by Ales Hrdlicka

in col-

laboration with William H. Holmes and Bailey

Willis

(53).

Antiquities

of

the

Little

Colorado basin by Jesse Walter Fewkes

(54).

Antiquities

of

the

Isle of Pines,-

Cuba by Jesse Walter

Fewkes

(19)

Contributions to North American Ethnology

(Allofthe volumen ofthisseriesareout ofprint)

Department

of tlie Interior

U.

S.

Geographical and Geological survey

of

the Rocky Mountain region

J.

W. Powell

in

charge

Contributions

to

North American ethnology — Volume

I

[-VII, IX]

[Seal of

the department] Washington Government Printing

Office

1877 [-1893]

4°.

9

vols.

Contents

Volume

I, 1877:

PartI. Tribes oftkeextreme Northwest,

by W.

H. Dall. P. 1-10(3, 10

unnum-

beredpi.,9

unnumbered

fig., pocket map.

On

thedistributionand nomenclatureof thenative tribesofAlaskaand the adjacent territory. P. 7-40, pocket map.

On

succession in the shell-heapsof the Aleutian islands. P. 41-91, 10 pi., 9fig.

On

theoriginof the Innuit. P.93-106.

Appendix

toparti. Linguistics. P. 107-156.

Notesonthe nativesofAlaska (communicatedtothelateGeorgeGibbs,M.D., in 1862),

by

His Excellency J. Furuhelm, late governor of the Russian-

American

colonies. P. 111-116.

Terms

ofrelationship used

by

the Innuit; a seriesobtained from nativesof

Cumberland

inlet,

by W.

II.Dall. P.117-119.

Vocabularies [byGeorge Gibbs and

W.

H.Dall]. P. 121-153.

Note onthe useofnumerals

among

theT'simsi-an',

by

GeorgeGibbs,M.

D.

P. 155-156.

Part II. Tribes of western Washington and northwestern Oregon,

by

George Gibbs,

M.

D. P. 157-241, pocket map.

Appendix

topartii. Linguistics. P. 243-361.

Vocabularies [by George Gibbs,

Wm.

F. Tolmie, and G. Mengarini].

P. 247-283.

Dictionary of the Niskwalli [Nisqualli-English and English-Nisqualli],

by

.GeorgeGibbs. P.285-361

.

Volume

II, 1890 [1891]:

The Klamath

Indiansofsouthwestern Oregon,

by

Albert

Samuel

Gatschet.

Two

parts, cvii,711p.,

map,

iii,711p.

Volume

III,1877:

Tribesof California,

by

Stephen Powers. 635 p., frontispiece, 44 fig. (incl. 42

pi.), 3 p.music, pocket nnq).

Appendix. Linguistics,edited

by

J.

W.

Powell. P.439-613.

Volume

IV, 1881:

Houses and house-life of the American aborigines,

by

Lewis H. Morgan, xiv, 281p.,frontispiece, 57 fig. (incl. 28pi.).

100931°—

Bull.

49—11

3 17

(20)

18 BUREAU OF AMERICAN ETHNOLOGY

[bull.49

Volume

V, 1882:

Observations on cup-shaped and other lapidarian sculptures in the Old World andinAmerica,

by

CharlesRan. 1881. 112p.,61fig. (forming 35pis.).

On

prehistoric trephining

and

cranialamulets,

by

RobertFletcher, M. R. C. S.

Eng.,act. asst.surgeonU.S.

Army.

1882. 32p.,9pi.,2fig.

A

studyofthemanuscriptTroano,

by

Cyrus Thomas, Ph. D., withan introduc- tion

by

D. G. Brinton,

M.

D. 1882. xxxvii, 237p.,9pi.,101fig.,25small

unnumbered

cuts.

Volume

VI, 1890 [1892]:

The

jZegihalanguage,

by

James

Owen

Dorsey. xviii,794p.

Volume

VII, 1890[1892]:

A

Dakota-Englishdictionary,

by

Stephen ReturnRiggs, edited

by

James

Owen

Dorsey. x,665p.

Volume

VIII: Notpublished.

Volume

IX,1893 [1894]:

Dakota

grammar

texts, and ethnography,

by

Stephen Return Riggs, edited

by

James

Owen

Dorsey. xxxii, 239p.

Introductions

{Allofthevolumes ofthisseriesareout ofprint)

(1).

Introduction

to

the study

of

Indian languages, with words, phrases, and sentences

to

be

collected.

By

J.

W. Powell.

[Seal of

the Department

of

the

Interior.]

Washington Government Printing

Office

1877

4°.

104

p.,

10 blank

leaves.

Second editionas follows:

(2).

Smithsonian Institution — Bureau

of

Ethnology

J.

W. Powell

director

— Introduction

to

the study

of

Indian languages with words,

])hrases

and sentences

to

be

collected

— by

J.

W. Powell — Second

edi-

tion—with charts — Washington Government Printing

Office

1880

4°. xi,

228

p.,

10 blank

leaves,

4 kinship charts

in

pocket. A 16°

"Alphabet"

of

2 leaves accompanies the work.

(3).

Smithsonian Institution — Bureau

of

Ethnology — Introduction

to

the study

of

sign language among the North American Indians

as illustrating

the gesture speech

of

mankind — by Garrick Mallery, bre- vet

lieut. col.,

U.

S.

Army — Washington Government Printing

Office

1880

4°. iv,

72

p.,

33 unnumbered

figs.

(4).

Smithsonian Institution — Bureau

of

Ethnology

J.

W. Powell,

director

— Introduction

to

the study

of

mortuary customs among the North American Indians — by Dr. H.

C.

Yarrow

act. asst. surg.

U.

S.

Army — Washington Government Printing

Office

1880

4°. ix,

114p.

(21)

list of publications 19 Miscellaneous Publications

(All oftheicorksinthis series,exceptNo.9,areout ofprint)

(1).

Smithsonian Institution — Bureau

of Etlinolot^y J.

W. Powell,

director

— A

collection of

gesture-signs and

signals of

the North American Indians with some

c<)m])arisons

by Garrick Malleiy

bre-

vet

lieut. col.

and formerly acting

chief signal officer,

U.

S.

Army-

Distributed only

to

collaborators — Washington Government Printing

Office

1880

4°.

329

p.

Note. 250 copies printedforuseofcollaborators only.

(2).

Smithsonian Institution — Bureau

of

Ethnology

J.

W. Powell

director

— Proof-sheets

of

a bibliography

of

the languages

of

the North American Indians by James Constantino Pilling— (Distributed only

to collaborators)

— Wasliington Government Printing

Oliice

1885

4°. xl,

1135

p.,

20

])]. (facsimiles).

Note.

Only

110 copies printed forthe useof collaborators, 10of

them

on oneside of thesheet. Itwas the intention to have thisBibliography form

Vohune X

of the Contributionsto NorthAmericanEthnology, butthework assumed suchproportions that it was subsequently

deemed

advisalsle to pul)lish it as a part of the series of Bulletins,devotinga Bulletintoeachlinguistic stock.

(3).

Linguistic

families of

the Indian

tribes

north

of

Mexico, with provisional

list of

the

principal tribal

names and synonyms.

[1885]

16°.

55

p.

Note.

A

fewcopiesprintedfortheuseofthe compilersofaDictionaryofAmerican Indians[Handbook. SeeBulletin30]. Itiswithouttitle-page,name,ordate,Initwas compiled fromamanuscriptlistofIndian tribes

by

James Mooney.

(4).

[Map

of]

Linguistic stocks

of

American Indians north

of

Mex-

ico

by

J.

W. Powell.

[1891]

Note.

A

limited editionof this

map, which

formsplate1 oftheSeventh

Annual

Report, was issued on

heavy

paper, 19

by

22 inclies, forthe use of students. This

map

was revisedand published in theReport on Indians

Taxed

and Not

Taxed

in theUnited States attheEleventhCensus, 1890. (See No.7.)

(5).

Tribes

of

North America, with synonymy. Skittagetan fam-

ily. [1890]

"

4°.

13

p.

Note.

A

fewcopiesprintedfortheuseofthe compilersofthe

Handbook

ofAmeri- canIndians. Itwas prepared

by

II.

W.

HenshaAV, andcontainstwo samplesofstyle for the

Handbook,

the second beginning on page 7 \\-ith the head, "Dictionaryof Indiantribalnames." (See Bulletin30.)

(6).

Advance pages Smithsonian

Institution

Bureau

of

American Ethnology — Dictionary

of

American Indians north

of

Mexico

. . .

[Vignette]

Wasliington 1903

8°.

33

p.

Note. Prepared

by

F.

W.

Hodge.

Two

hundred and fiftycopies printed

by

the Smithsonian Institution for the use of the compilers of the Dictionary [Handbook.

SeeBulletin30].

(22)

20 BUREAU OF AMERICAN ETHNOLOGY

[bull.49 (7).

[Map

of]

Linguistic stocks

of

American Indians north

of

Mexico by

J.

W. Powell.

[1906]

Note. Printed on

heavy

paperinadvanceofthe

Handbook

of

American

Indians (Bulletin 30), part1,of

which

itform-; anillustration.

(8).

Bureau

of

American Ethnology with

list of

publications.

Keprinted from Handhook of American Indians, Bulletin 30

(i)t. 1),

Bureau

of

American Ethnology.

[1906]

8°. 5 p.

(9).

Indian missions north

of

Mexico by James Mooney. Re- printed from

FlamlhooJc

of American Indians, Bulletin 30

(pt. 1),

Bureau

of

American Ethnology. Wasliington 1907

8°.

39

p.

Index to Authors and Titles

A=Anniial

Report. B=Bulletin.

C=

Contributionsto North American Ethnology.

I

=

Introductinn. M=MiscellaneousPublications.

Aborigine.? ofPortoRicoandneighl:)oringislands(Fewkes)

A

xxv,3.

Acti\'ital similarities(Powell)

A

in, Ixv.

Acti\-ities. See Esthetology; Philology; Sociology; Sophiology;

Technology.

Alaska,Notes onthe nativesof (Furuhelmj (_' i, 111.

Algonquianlanguages,Bibliographyofthe(Pilling)

B

13.

tril)es, preliminary reportonclassificationof (Michelson)

A

28.

SeeBulletin 40(pt. 1).

Amulets, cranial, Prehistoric trephiningand(R. Fletcher)

C

v.

Animal

carvingsfrom

mounds

oftheMississippivalley(

Henshaw)

.

A

ii, 117.

Anthropologicdata. Limitationstotheuseof

some

(P(iwell)

A

i, 71.

Antiquities,Certain, ofeasternMexico (Fewke^)

A

xxv, 221.

Antiquities;

Mayan

calendar systems, history, and (Forstemann, Schellhas, Sapper, Seler,Dieseldorff)

B

28.

Mexican

andCentral

American

calendar systemsand (Seler)...B 28.

ofcentral and southeastern Missouri(Fowke)

B

37.

oftheIsle ofPines,

Cuba

(Fewkes)

B

54.

ofthe

Jemez

plateau.

New

Mexico (Hewett)

B

32.

ofthe LittleColorado basin (Fewkes)

B

53.

ofthe

Mesa

VerdeNationalPark: Spruce-tree ITouje (Fewkes).

B

41.

CliffPalace(Fewkes)

B

51.

oftheupperGila-Saltvalleys (Hough)

B

35.

Apache,

The

medicine-menofthe (Bourke)

A

ix,443.

Archeological expeditiontoArizonain1895(Fewkes)

A

xvn,519.

Archeologicinvestigations inJames and

Potomac

valleys(Fowke)..B 23.

Architectureof

Tusayan

andCibola (V. Mindeleff)

A

viir, 3.

Arizona, AboriginalremainsinVerdevalleyin (C.Mindeleff)

A

xiii, 179.

Antiquitiesof theupperGila-Salt valleys(Hough)

B

35.

Archeologicalexpeditionto,in1895(Fewkes)

A

xvir,519.

Illustratedcatalogueofcollectionsfrom,in1879 (J. Stevenson).

A

ii, 307.

in1881(J. Stevenson)

A

iii, 511.

Navaho

National

Monument,

visit to(Fewkes)

B

50.

The

cliff-ruins of

Canyon

deChelly in(C.Mindeleff)

A

xvi, 73.

See Casa Grande; Tusayan.

(23)

LIST OF PUBLICATIONS 21

Art, Ancient,oftheprovinceof Cliiriqiii, Colomliia (Holmes)

A

vi, 3.

ceramic,

Form

and ornamentin(Holmes)

A

iv,437.

in shell of theancientAmericans (Holmes)

A

ii, 179.

Prehistorictextile, ofeasternUnitedStates(Holmes)

A

xiii, 3.

Stone (Fowke)

A

xiii 47.

textile,

A

studyofthe(Holmes)

A

vi, 189.

Artists,native,

Hopi

katcinas

drawn by

(Fewkes)

A

xxi,3.

Athapascanlanguages, Bil)liographyof the (Pilling)

B

14.

SeeBulletin 40(pt. 1).

Beringstrait,

Eskimo

about(Nelson)

A

xviii, 3.

Bibliographyof the Algonquianlanguages (Pilling)

B

13.

oftheAthapascanlanguages (Pilling)

B

14.

of the Chinookan languages, including the Chinook jargon

(Pilliug) "...

B

15.

ofthe

Eskimo

language(Pilling)

B

1.

oftheIroquoian languages(Pilling)

B

6

ofthelanguagesoftheNorth American Indians, Pioof sheetsof

(Pilling)

M

2.

ofthe

Muskhogean

languages(Pilling)

B

9.

ofthe Salishan languages(Pilling)

B

16.

oftheSiouanlanguages(Pilling)

B

5.

ofthe

Wakashan

languages(Pilling)

B

19.

Biloxi-Ofodictionary(Dorsey-Swanton)

B

47.

Boas, Franz. Chinooktexts

B

20.

editor.

Handbook

ofAmerican Indian languages

B

40.

Kathlamettexts

B

26.

The

Central

Eskimo A

vi, 399.

Tsimshiantexts

B

27.

Bourke,JohnG.

The

medicine-menofthe

Apache A

ix,443.

Bowditch, C. P. [Paperstranslated underthe supervisionofJ...B 28.

Brinton, DanielG.

The

graphic systemand ancientmethodsof

the

Mayas C

v(pt. 3), xvii.

Bushnell,

David

I., jr. Choctawof

Bayou Lacomb,

Louisiana...B 48.

Bjdngton,Cyi-us. Choctawdictionary(Swanton,editor)

B

46.

Calendarhistoryofthe

Kiowa

Indians(Mooney)

A

xvii, 129.

Calendarsystems,

Mayan

(Thomas)

A

xix, 693,

and

XXII.

Mayan

antiquities, history,and (Forstcmann, Schellhas, Sapper,

Seler, Dieseldorff)

B

28.

Mexican

and

Central

American

antiquitiesand(Seler)

B

28.

California,Perforated stonesfrom

(Henshaw

)

B

2.

Tribesof(Powers) C iii.

Carvings, Animal, from

mounds

of the Mississippi Valley (Hen-

shaw)

A

II,117.

Casa Grande, Arizona (Fewkes)

A

28.

Casa

Grande

ruin (C.Mindeleff)

A

xiii,289.

The

repairof,in1891(C. Mindeleff)

A

xv,315.

Catalogueof collections from

New

Mexico and Arizona in 1879

(J.Stevenson)

A

ii, .307.

- ofcollectionsfrom

New

Mexicoin1880(J.Stevenson)

A

ii,423.

ofcollectionsfrom pueblosin 1881 (J. Stevenson)

A

iii, 511.

ofcollections

made

in1881 (Holmes) V in,427.

of linguisticmanuscriptsin the library of the Bureau of Eth-

nology(Pilling)

A

I,553.

ofprehistoricworkseast ofthe

Rocky

Mountains (Thomas)

B

12.

(24)

22 BUREAU OF AMERICAN" ETHNOLOGY

[bull.49

(Pegihalanguage,

The

(Dorsey)

C

vi.

Central America, Indian languages of Mexico and (Thomas-

Swanton)

B

44.

Numeral

systemsof

Mexico and

(Thomas)

A

xix,853.

Central

American

picture-writing.Studiesin(Holden)

A

i,205.

and Mexican

antiquities

and

calendarsystems(Seler)

B

28.

CeremonialofHasjeltiDailjis

and

mythical sand paintingof the

Navajo(J.Stevenson)

A

viii,229.

Ceremonies,

Tusayan Snake

(Fewkes)

A

xvi, 267.

Ceremony,

The

Hako, a

Pawnee

(A.Fletcher)

A

xxii.

Cessions,Indianland, intheUnitedStates(Royce-Thomas)

A

xviii, 521.

ofland

by

Indiantribes totheUnited States(Royce)

A

xv, 315.

Cherokee,

Myths

ofthe(Mooney)

A

xix, 3.

nationofIndians,

The

(Royce)

A

v, 121.

The

sacredformulasofthe(Mooney)

A

vii,301.

Chinookanlanguages. Bibliographyofthe (Pilling)

B

15.

SeeBulletin 40(pt. 1).

Chinooktexts(Boas)

B

20.

Chippewa

music (Densmore)

B

45.

See Ojibwa.

Chiriqui,Colombia,Ancientartofthe provinceof(Holmes)

A

vi, 3.

The

useofgold

and

othermetals

among

theancient inhabitants

of (Holmes) .B 3.

Choctaw

dictionary (Byington),Swanton, editor

B

46.

Choctawof

Bayou Lacomb,

Louisiana (Bushnell)

B

48.

Cibola,Architectureof

Tusayan

and(V.Mindeleff)

A

viii, 3.

SeeZuni.

Clans,Tusayan, Localizationof (C.Mindeleff)

A

xix,635.

CliffPalace,

Mesa

VerdeNational Park,Arizona (Fewkes)

B

51.

Cliff-ruinsof

Canyon

deChelly,Arizona(C.Mindeleff)

A

xvi, 73.

Codices,Maya, Aidstothestudyofthe(Thomas)

A

vi,253.

Collections, Illustratedcatalogueof,from

New

Mexico and Arizona

in1879(J. Stevenson)

A

ii,307.

from

New Mexico

in1880(J. Stevenson)

A

ii,423.

from pueblosin1881(J. Stevenson)

A

iii,511.

made

in1881 (Holmes)

A

in,427.

Colorado, Antiquitiesof

Mesa

Verde National Park: Cliff Palace

(Fewkes)

B

51.

Spruce-tree

House

(Fewkes)

B

41.

Coronadoexpedition, 1540-1542,

The

(Winship)

A

xiv, 329.

Cosmology, Iroquoian (Hewitt)

A

xxi, 127.

Cuba. SeeIsle ofPines.

Culin, Stewart.

Games

oftheNorthAmericanIndians

A

xxiv.

Cults, Siouan,

A

studyof(Dorsey)

A

xi, 351.

Cup-shaped andother lapidarian sculptures(Rau)

C

v.

Cushing, F.

H.

OutlinesofZunicreation

myths A

xiii,321.

Puelilopotteryas illustrativeofZuiiiculturegrowth

A

iv,467.

Zunifetiches

A

ii,3.

Dakota-Englishdictionary,

A

(Riggs)

C

vn.

Dakota grammar, text,and ethnography(Riggs)

C

ix.

Dall,WilliamH.

On

masks, labrets, andcertainaboriginal cus-

toms

A

III,67.

Terms

ofrelationshipused

by

the Innuit

C

i, 117.

Referensi

Dokumen terkait

Course Contents The core topics of the training programme are:  Principles and practices of organic farming for sustainable crop production  Recent development in organic

BUREAU OF AMERICAN ETHNOLOGY BULLETIN 154 PLATE 19 a, Feature 8, site 14PH4, an area of scattered human bones showing some articulation.. Note aHnementofbeads, b, Feature9, site14PH4,