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,1911SMITHSONIAN INSTITUTION
BXJRE^^XJ OF T^MERIC^VN ETHNOLO&Y
BULLETIN
49LIST OF PUBLICATIONS
OF THE BUREAU OF
AMERICAN ETHNOLOGY
WITH INDEX TO
AUTHORS AND TITLES
(SECOND IMPRESSION)
WASHINGTON
GOVERNMENT PRINTING OFFICE
AUGUST,19HLIST OF PUBLICATIONS OF THE BUREAU OF AMERICAN ETHNOLOGY
NOTE
The publications
ofthe Bureau
ofAmeiican Etlmology
consist ofContributions
toNorth American Etlmology, Amiual Reports, Bulle- tms. Introductions, and
JVIiscellaneousPubhcations.
The
series ofContributions,
inquarto, was begun
in1877 by the Geographical and Geological Survey
ofthe Rocky Mountam Region
(J.
W. Powell,
director).Of the earher numbers, printed under
autliority of special resolutions ofCpngress, volumes
i, ii (intwo
parts),
and
iiihad been completed when,
inthe year 1879, the Bureau
of
Etlmology was organized, with
J.W. Powell
as director.In March, 1881, the pubhcation
ofvolumes
vi, vii, viii, ix,and x was authorized by concurrent resolution
ofCongress, but the
serieswas discontmued
in 1895, aftervolumes
ito viiand ix had been completed.
The publication
ofthe Annual Reports
inroyal octavo form began with that
forthe
fiscalyear ending June
30,1880. Until 1895 the successive reports were each authorized by Congress, usually by con- current
resolution; sincethat time they have been published under
autliority ofthe law providmg
forthe prmting and binding and the
distribution ofpublic documents, approved January
12, 1895.At the
close ofthe
fiscalyear 1910-11, twenty-six Aimual Reports had appeared
(theFourteenth, Seventeenth, Eighteenth, Nineteenth, and Twenty-second, each
intwo
parts), in all,thirty-one volumes.
The Twenty-seventh Report
isinthe bindery and the Twenty-eighth
in i)i-e})aration.The present maximum
edition ofthe Annual Reports
is9,850
copies.Of these the Senate
receives 1,500,the House
ofRepresent-
atives 3,000,and the Bureau
ofAmerican Ethnology 3,500
copies.From the remammg 1,850 copies are drawn the
j)ersonalcopies
ofSenators, Representatives, and Delegates, and 500 copies
for distri-bution
toGovernment
librariesand
todesignated public depositories^
throughout the country. The remamder are
soldby the Superin- tendent
ofDocuments, Government Printing
Office, ata
shglitadvance on the
cost.In August,
1886,the
director ofthe bureau was authorized by
joint resolution of
Congress to begin the
j)ublicati(m ofa
series of1Each Senator, Ui'iirosontativc,and Delegatein Congressiscntltlod to designateonedepositoryto receiveallpublicdocuinents(secaanualreportsoftheSuperintendentofDocuments, UovernnieulPrinting Ollice)
4 BUREAU OF AMERICAN ETHNOLOGY
[bull.49bulletins,
wMcli were issued
inoctavo form and
inpaper
covers,and in July,
1888,the continuation
ofthe
serieswas authorized by concur- rent
resolution.Provision
forpublishing the bulletms was omitted from the public printing law
ofJan.
12,1895, and the
issuetermi- nated
in1894. Up
tothat time 24
bulletinshad been published. By
concurrent
resolution in April,1900, Congress authorized the resump-
tion ofthe Bulletin
seriesinroyal octavo form. Nos.
25, 26,and 27 were issued under
this provision,and
inFebruary, 1903, by
joint resolution ofCongress 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
ofthe Bulletin
seriesis9,850
copies, ofwhich the Senate
receives 1,500,the House
ofKepresentatives
3,000,and the Bureau
ofAmeri- can Ethnology 3,500
copies.The remaining 1,850 copies
are dis-tributed by the Superintendent
ofDocuments, Government Printing
Office.Of these about 500 copies are sent
todesignated
libraries;the
restare held by him
for sale ata
price slightlyabove
cost.Besides the
seriesmentioned there have been issued small
editions offour Introductions and
of eightMiscellaneous Publications, intended wholly or
chiefly forthe use
ofcollaborators and
corre-spondents. These were not
speciallyauthorized by Congress, but
asa
rulewere paid
forfrom the annual appropriations
forcontmuing
researches.
With the exception
ofthe few copies
ofthe pubHcations
ofthe bureau disposed
ofby the Superintendent
ofDocuments the
editionsare distributed
free ofcharge. The quota allowed the bureau
isdistributed mamly
to librariesand
institutions oflearning and
tocollaborators and others engaged
inanthropological research
or inmstruction.
Annual Reports
First
aimual report
ofthe Bureau
ofEthnology
tothe secretary
ofthe Smithsonian Institution 1879-80 by
J.W. Powell
director [Vignette]Washington Government Printing
Office1881
Roy.
8°.XXXV, 603
p.,347
fig. (inch54 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 useofsome
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, professorofmathematics,U.S.NavalObservatory. P. 205-245,fig.48-60.
LIST OF PUBLICATIONS 5
Cessionsoflandby Indiantribos(oIhoUnited States: illustrated
by
thoseinthe stateofIndiana,by
('. ('.Royco. P.247-262,map.Signlanguage
among
NorthAmerican Indianscompared with thatamong
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
themanuscriptsofMessrs.J.O. Dorsey, A.S.Gatschet, andS. II.Riggs. P.579-589.
Index. P.591-603.
Second annuul report
ofthe Bureau
of Etlinoloo;}- to tliesecretary
of tliewSmitlt-sonianInstitution 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 tjieseforming 98
pi.), 2maps. 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
carvingsfrommounds
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
WilliamH.
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
ofthe Bureau
ofEthnology
tothe secretary
ofthe Smithsonian Institution 1881-82
b}^ J.W. Powell
director [Vignette]Washington Government Printing
Oflice1884
[1885]Roy.
8°.Lxxiv, 606
p.,44
pi.,200 (+
2umiumbered)
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
WilliamH.
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.
6 BUREAU OF AMEEICAN ETHNOLOGY
[bull.49Fourth annual report
ofthe Bureau
ofEthnology
tothe secretary
ofthe Smithsonian Institution 1882-83 by
J.W. Powell
director [Vignette]Washington Government Printing
Office1886
[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
WilliamH.
Holmes. P. 257-360,fig.210-360.Ancientpottery of the Mississippi valley,
by
WilliamH.
Holmes. P. 361-436,fig. 361-463.
Origin
and
development of formand
ornament inceramic art,by
WilliamH.
Holmes. P.437-465, fig.464-489.
A
studyofPueblopotteryas illustrative ofZuniculture growth,by
FrankHam-
iltonGushing. P.467-521,fig.490-564.
Indexto
accompanying
papers. P.523a-532.Fifth annual report
ofthe Bureau
ofEthnology
tothe secretary
ofthe Smithsonian Institution 1883-84 by
J.W. Powell
director [Vignette]Washington Government Printing
Office1887
[1888]Roy.
8°. Liii,564
p.,23
pi. (inch2 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 colonialand
federalgovernments,by
CharlesC. Royce. P. 121-378, pi. vii- IX (pi.VIIIand
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
ofthe Bureau
ofEthnology
tothe secretary
ofthe Smithsonian Institution 1884-85 by
J.W. Powell
director [Vignette]Washington Government Printing
Office1888
[1889]Roy.
8°. LViii,675
p. (inch 6 p. ofmusic), 10
pi. (incl. 2pocket maps), 546
fig.,44 small unnumbered
cuts.Out of
'print.ReportoftheDirector. P.xxiii-lviii.
Ancientart of the province of Chiriqui, Colombia,
by
WilliamH.
Holmes. P.3-187,pi.I,fig.1-285.
A
studyofthetextile art initsrelationtothedevelopmentofformand
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.
LIST OF PUBLICATIONS
7"Seventli annual report
oftho Bureau
ofEthnology
tothe secretary
ofthe Smithsonian Institution 1885-86 by
J,W. Powell
director [Vi<i:nette] Wasliinjj:tonGovernment
Printinc?Of
lice1891
[1892]Roy.
8°. XLiii,409
p.,27
pi. (inchpocket 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
ofthe Bureau
ofEthnology
tothe secretary
ofthe Smithsonian
Inslitutiou 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 ofthe Bureau
ofEthnology
tothe secretary
ofthe 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 ofthe Bureau
ofEthnology
tothe secretary
ofthe Smithsonian
Institution1888-89 by
J.W. Powell
director [Vignette]Wa-sliington Government Printing
Oliice1893
[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.
8 BUREAU OF AMERICAN ETHNOLOGY
[bull,49Eleventh annual report
ofthe Bureau
ofEthnology
tothe secretary
ofthe Smithsonian Institution 1889-90 by
J.W. Powell
director [Vignette]Wasliington Government Printing
Office 189-4Roy.
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
LucienM.
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
ofthe Bureau
ofEthnology
tothe secretary
ofthe Snfithsonian Institution 1890-91 by
J.W. Powell
director [Vignette]Washington Government Printing
Office1894
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
ofthe Bureau
ofEthnology
tothe
secre-tary
ofthe Snfithsonian Institution 1891-92 oj
J.W. Powell
director [Vignette]Washington Government Printing
Office1896
Roy.
8°. Lix,462
p.,60
pi.,330
fig.Out of
iwint.ReportoftheDirector. P. xix-lix.
Prehistoric textile art of Eastern United States,
by
"WilliamHenry
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
JamesOwen
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
ofthe Bureau
ofEthnology
tothe
secre-tary
ofthe Smithsonian Institution 1892-93 by
J.W. Powell
directorIn two parts — part
1 [-2] [Vignette]Waslungton Gov-
ernment Printing
Office1896
[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
WalterJames
Hoffman,M.
D. P. 3-328,pi.i-xxxviifig. 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
LIST OF PUBLICATIONS 9 Fifteenth annual report
ofthe Bureau
ofEthnok)gy
tothe secretary
ofthe Smithsonian Institution
]803-'94 by
J.W. Powell director
[Vignette]Washin<2:ton Govei-nnient
Printin*:; Office1897
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
^\'illiamHenry
Holmes. P. 3-152, pi. i-ciiiandfrontispiece, fig. l-29a.The
Siouan Indians; apreliminary sketch,by W
JMcGee.
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 CasaGrande
ruin, Arizona, in 1891,by
CosmosMindeleff. P.315- 349, pi. cxii-cxxv.Index. P. 351-36G.
Sixteenth annual
re])ortofthe Bureau
ofAmerican Ethnolof^y
tothe secretary
ofthe Smithsonian Institution 1894-'95 by
J.W.
Powell
director [Viunette]Washington Government Printing
Office1897
^
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 andW
JMcGee.
P.3-72, pi. i-xL.
The
cliff-ruinsofCanyon
de Chelly, Arizona,by
CosmosMindeleff. P. 73-198, pi. Lxi-Lxiii,fig. 1-83.Day
symbolsoftheMaya
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
ofthe Bureau
ofAmerican Ethnology
tothe
.secretary
ofthe Smithsonian Institution 1895-96 by
J.W.
Powell director In two parts —
i^art 1 [-2][Mgnette] Waslimg-
ton Government Printing
Office1898
[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
JMcGee.
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
ofthe Bureau
ofAmerican Ethnology
tothe secretary
ofthe Smithsonian Institution 1896-97 by
J.W.
100931°—Bull.
49—11
910 BUREAU OF AMERICAN ETHNOLOGY
[bull 49Powell
directorIn two parts--part
1 [-2] [Vij^nette]Washington Government Printing
Office1899
[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 anintroductionby
CyrusThomas. P.521-964, pi.cviii-clxxiv.Index. P.965-997.
Nineteenth annual report
ofthe Bureau
ofAmerican Ethnology
tothe secretary
ofthe Smithsonian Institution 1897-98 by
J.W.
Powell director In two parts — part
1 [-2] [\^ignette]Washington Government Printmg
Office1900
[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
JMcGee.
P.821-851.Numeral
systems of Mexicoand
Central America,by
CyrusThomas.
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
ofthe Bureau
ofAmerican Etlmology to the secretary
ofthe Smitlisonian Institution 1898-99 by
J.W.
Powell
director [Vignette]Washington GoA^ernment Printing
Office1903
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
ofAmerican
Ethnology. P.cxcix-ccxxiii.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 ofthe
Biiieaii ofAmerican Ethnolo<ry
tothe secretary
ofthe Smithsonian Institution 1899-1900 by
J.W.
Powell
director [Vignette]Washington (iovenunent Printing
Office1903
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
ofthe Bureau
ofAnuMican Ethnology
tothe secretary
ofthe Smithsonian Institution 1900-1901
J.W.
Powell
directorIn two parts — part
1 [-2] [Vignette]Washing-
ton Government Printing
Office 1903
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, aPawnee
ceremony,by
AliceC. Fletcher,holderofThaw
fellowship,Peabody Museum,
HarvardUniversity. P. 5-368,pi.lxxxiii-xci,fig.169-178.Indextopart2.
Twenty-third annual report
ofthe Bureau
ofAmerican Ethnology
to
the secretary
ofthe Smithsonian Institution 1901-2
J.W.
Powell
director[Mgnette] Washington Government Printing
Office1904
[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
ofthe Bureau
ofAmerican Ethnology
tothe secretary
ofthe Smithsonian Institution 1902-3 W.
II.Holmes,
Chief. [Vignette]Washington Government Printing
Office1907
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.
12 BUREAU OF AMERICAN ETHNOLOGY
[bull.49Twenty-fifth annual report
of tlicBureau
ofAmerican
Etlinolo<2;yto the secretary
ofthe Smithsonian Institution 1903-4
[Vignette]Washington Government Printing
Office1907
lioy. 8°.XXIX, 296
p.,129 pL, 70
fig.Out of
print.Reportof theChief. P. ix-xxix.
The
aboriginesof PortoRicoand
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
ofthe Bureau
ofAmerican Ethnology to the secretary
ofthe Smithsonian Institution 1904-5 [Vignette]
Washington Government Printing
Office1908 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
ofthe Bureau
ofAmerican Ethnol- ogy to the secretary
ofthe Smithsonian Institution 1905-G
[Vi-gnette] Washington Government Printing
Office1911
Roy
8°.P. 672, 65 pL, 132
fig.ReportoftheChief. P.5-14.
The Omaha
Tribe,by
AliceC.Fletcher,holderoftheThaw
fellowship,Pcabody Museum,
Ilarvard University,and
FrancisLa
Flesche, amember
oftheOmaha
tribe. P. 15-654.
Index.
In Preparation
Twenty-eighth annual report
ofthe Bureau
ofAmerican Ethnology to the secretary
ofthe Smithsonian Institution 1906-7
[Vignette]Washington Government Printing
Office1911 Roy.
8°.Reportofthe Ethnologist-in-charge.
CasaGrande,Arizona,
by
JesseWalter Fewkes.Preliminary reportonthelinguistic classification ofAlgouquiantribes,
by Truman
Michelson.
Bulletins
(1).
Bibliography
ofthe Eskimo language by James (\uistantine
Pilling1887
8°. V,
116
p. (inch8
p. of facsimiles).(2),
Perforated stones from
Californiaby Henry W. llenshaw 1887
8°.
34
p.,16
fig.LIST OF PUBLICATIONS" 13
(3).
The use
ofgold and other metals among the ancient inhabit- ants
of Chiriqni,Isthmus
ofDaiien by William
II.Holmes 1887
8°.
27
p.,22
fig.(4).
Work
innioimd exploration
ofthe Bureau of Ethnology by Cyrus Thomas 1887
8°.
15
p., 1 fig.(5).
Bibliography
ofthe Siouan languages by James Constantine
Pilling1887
8°. V,
87
p.(6).
Bibliography
ofthe Iroquoian languages by James C.
Pilling18SS
[1889]8°. VI,
208
p. (inch4
p. facsimiles), 5urmumbered
facsimiles.Out of
lyrint.(7).
Textile
fabrics ofancient Peru by William
II.Holmes 1889
8°.
17
p., 11 fig.(8).
The problem
ofthe Ohio mounds by Cyrus Thomas 1889
8°.
54
p., 8 fig.(9).
Bibliography
ofthe Muskliogean languages by James Con- stantine
Pilling1889
8°. V,
114
p.Out of print
(10).
The
circular,square, and octagonal earthworks
ofOhio by Cyrus Thomas 1889
8°.
35
p., 11pL,
5 fig.Out of
print.(11).
Omaha and Ponka
lettersby James Owen Dorsov 1891
8°.127
p.Out of
print.(12).
Catalogue
of prehistoricworks east
ofthe Rocky mountains by Cyrus Thomas 1891
8°.
246
p.,17
pi.and maps. Out of
print.(13).
Bibliography
ofthe Algonquian languages by James Con- stantine
Pilling1891
[1892]8°. X,
614
p.,82
facsimiles.Out of
print.(14).
Bibliography of the Athapascan languages by James Con- stantine
Pilling1892
8°. XIII,
125 p
(inch4
p. facsimiles).Out of
print.(15).
Bibliography
ofthe Chinookan languages (including the Chi- nook jargon) by James Constantine
Pilling1893
8°. XIII,
81
p. (inch 3 p.facsimiles).Out of
print.(16).
Bibliography
ofthe Salishan languages by James Constan-
tine Pilling1883
8°. XIII,
86
p. (incl.4
p. facsimiles).Out of
print.(17).
The Pamunkey Indians
ofVirginia 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.14 BUREAU OF .AMERICAN ETHNOLOGY
[bull.49(19).
Bibliography
ofthe Wakashan
lanf'uagesby James Con- stantine
Pilling1894
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
inIndian Territory by William Henry Holmes 1894
8°.
19
p., 12pi,
7 fig.Out of
print.(22).
The Siouan
tribes ofthe East by James Mooney 1894
[1895]8°.
101
p.,map. Out of
print.(23).
Ai-cheologic investigations
inJames and Potomac valleys by Gerard Fowke 1894
[1895]8°.
80
p.,17
fig.Out of
print.(24).
List
ofthe publications
ofthe Bureau
ofEthnology, with index
toauthors 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
textsby 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
ofCharles P. Bowditch 1904
8°.
682
p.,49
pi.,134
fig.(29).
Haida
textsand myths by John R. Swanton 1905 Roy.
8°.448
p., 5 fig.(30).
Handbook
ofAmerican Indians north
ofMexico edited
l)yFrederick Webb Hodge
Pt. 11907
Pt. 21910
8°. Pt. 1 IX,
972
p.,many
figures,map.
Pt. 2 iv,1221
p.,many
figures.Out of
print.(31).
List
ofpublications
ofthe Bureau
ofAmerican Ethnology, with index
toauthors and
titles1906
8°.
31
p.Out of
print.(32).
Antiquities
ofthe Jemez plateau, New Mexico by Edgar L. Hewett 1906
8°.
55
p.,17 pL, 31
fig.,map.
(33).
Skeletal remains suggesting or attributed
to earlyman
inNorth America by Ales Hrdlicka 1907
8°.
113
p.,21 pL, 16
fig.(34).
Physiological and medical observations among the Indians
ofsouthwestern United States and northern Mexico by Ale§
Hrdhcka 1908
8°. IX,
460
p.,28
pi., 2 fig.List of pttbltcations 15
(35).
Antiquities
ofthe
ui)i)orGila and Salt River
valleys inArizona and New Mexico by Walter Hough 1907
8°.
96
p., 11 pi., 51 fig.,map.
(36).
List
ofthe
})ul)lications ofthe Bureau
ofAmerican Eth- nology, with index
toauthors and
titles1907
8°.
31
p.Out of
print.(37). Anticjuities of central
and southeastern Missouri by Gerard Fowke (Report on explorations made
in1906-07 under the auspices
ofthe Archaeological
Institute ofAmerica) 1910
8°. VII,
116
p., 19 pi.,20
fig.(38).
Unwritten
literature ofHawaii The sacred songs
of thehula compiled and
translated,with notes and an account
of thehula by Nathaniel B. Emerson, A.
:M., :M.D. 1909
8°.
288
p.,24
pi., 3 fig., 14musical
pieces(39).
Thngit myths and
textsby John R. Swanton 1909
8°. VIII,451
p.(40).
Handbook
ofAmerican Indian languages by Franz Boas Part
1With
illustrativesketches 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
ofthe Mesa Verde National Park: Spruce-tree House by
J.Walter Fewkes 1909
8°. VIII,
57
p.,21
pi.,37
fig.(42).
Tuberculosis among
certainIndian
tribes ofthe United States by Ale§ Hrdlicka 1909
8°. VII,
48
p.,22 pL .... ^
(43).
Indian
tribes of thelower
ISIississippivalley and adjacent coast
ofthe Gulf
ofMexico by John R. Swanton 1911
8°. VII,
387
p.,32
pi.(inchuhng
1map),
2 fig.(44).
Indian languages
ofMexico and Central America, and
theirgeographical
distributionby Cyrus Thomas,
assLstedby John R.
Swanton Accompanied with a
linguisticmap 1911
8°. VII,108
p., 1map
(45).
Chippewa music by Frances Densmo
re1910
8°.
XIX, 216
p., 12 {)!., 8 fig.,many musical
])ieces(48).
The Choctaw
ofBayou I^acomb,
St.Tammany
parish,Louisiana by DaA'id
I.Buslmell,
Jr.1909
8°.37
p.,22
pi., 1 fig.(49).
List
of thepublications
ofthe Bureau
ofAmerican Ethnology, with index
toauthors and
titles1910
8°.
32
p.(Sec(md impression
1911,34
p.)16 BUREAU OF AMERICAN ETHNOLOGY
Ibill.49(50).
Preliminary report on a
visit tothe Navaho National Monu- ment, Arizona by Jesse Walter Fewkes 1911
8°. VII, 35,
22 pi; 3
fig.(51).
Antiquities
ofthe Mesa Verde National Park:
CliffPalace 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
ofthe Biloxi and Ofo languages, accompanied with thirty-one Biloxi
textsand numerous Biloxi phrases by James Owen Dorsey and John R. Swanton
In Preparation
(40).
Handbook
ofAmerican Indian languages by Franz Boas Part
2With
illustrativesketches
(52).
Early man
inSouth America by Ales Hrdlicka
in col-laboration with William H. Holmes and Bailey
Willis(53).
Antiquities
ofthe
LittleColorado basin by Jesse Walter Fewkes
(54).
Antiquities
ofthe
Isle of Pines,-Cuba by Jesse Walter
Fewkes
Contributions to North American Ethnology
(Allofthe volumen ofthisseriesareout ofprint)
Department
of tlie InteriorU.
S.Geographical and Geological survey
ofthe Rocky Mountain region
J.W. Powell
incharge
—
Contributions
toNorth American ethnology — Volume
I[-VII, IX]
—
[Seal of
the department] Washington Government Printing
Office1877 [-1893]
4°.
9
vols.Contents
Volume
I, 1877:PartI. Tribes oftkeextreme Northwest,
by W.
H. Dall. P. 1-10(3, 10unnum-
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 usedby
the Innuit; a seriesobtained from nativesofCumberland
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
AlbertSamuel
Gatschet.Two
parts, cvii,711p.,
map,
iii,711p.Volume
III,1877:Tribesof California,
by
Stephen Powers. 635 p., frontispiece, 44 fig. (incl. 42pi.), 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 1718 BUREAU OF AMERICAN ETHNOLOGY
[bull.49Volume
V, 1882:Observations on cup-shaped and other lapidarian sculptures in the Old World andinAmerica,
by
CharlesRan. 1881. 112p.,61fig. (forming 35pis.).On
prehistoric trephiningand
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- tionby
D. G. Brinton,M.
D. 1882. xxxvii, 237p.,9pi.,101fig.,25smallunnumbered
cuts.Volume
VI, 1890 [1892]:The
jZegihalanguage,by
JamesOwen
Dorsey. xviii,794p.Volume
VII, 1890[1892]:A
Dakota-Englishdictionary,by
Stephen ReturnRiggs, editedby
JamesOwen
Dorsey. x,665p.
Volume
VIII: Notpublished.Volume
IX,1893 [1894]:Dakota
grammar
texts, and ethnography,by
Stephen Return Riggs, editedby
JamesOwen
Dorsey. xxxii, 239p.Introductions
{Allofthevolumes ofthisseriesareout ofprint)
(1).
Introduction
tothe study
ofIndian languages, with words, phrases, and sentences
tobe
collected.By
J.W. Powell.
[Seal ofthe Department
ofthe
Interior.]Washington Government Printing
Office1877
4°.
104
p.,10 blank
leaves.Second editionas follows:
(2).
Smithsonian Institution — Bureau
ofEthnology
J.W. Powell
director— Introduction
tothe study
ofIndian languages with words,
])hrasesand sentences
tobe
collected— by
J.W. Powell — Second
edi-tion—with charts — Washington Government Printing
Office1880
4°. xi,
228
p.,10 blank
leaves,4 kinship charts
inpocket. A 16°
"Alphabet"
of2 leaves accompanies the work.
(3).
Smithsonian Institution — Bureau
ofEthnology — Introduction
tothe study
ofsign language among the North American Indians
as illustratingthe gesture speech
ofmankind — by Garrick Mallery, bre- vet
lieut. col.,U.
S.Army — Washington Government Printing
Office1880
4°. iv,
72
p.,33 unnumbered
figs.(4).
Smithsonian Institution — Bureau
ofEthnology
J.W. Powell,
director— Introduction
tothe study
ofmortuary customs among the North American Indians — by Dr. H.
C.Yarrow
act. asst. surg.U.
S.Army — Washington Government Printing
Office1880
4°. ix,
114p.
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 ofgesture-signs and
signals ofthe North American Indians with some
c<)m])arisonsby Garrick Malleiy
bre-vet
lieut. col.and formerly acting
chief signal officer,U.
S.Army-
Distributed only
tocollaborators — Washington Government Printing
Office1880
4°.
329
p.Note. 250 copies printedforuseofcollaborators only.
(2).
Smithsonian Institution — Bureau
ofEthnology
J.W. Powell
director— Proof-sheets
ofa bibliography
ofthe languages
ofthe North American Indians by James Constantino Pilling— (Distributed only
to collaborators)— Wasliington Government Printing
Oliice1885
4°. xl,
1135
p.,20
])]. (facsimiles).Note.
Only
110 copies printed forthe useof collaborators, 10ofthem
on oneside of thesheet. Itwas the intention to have thisBibliography formVohune X
of the Contributionsto NorthAmericanEthnology, butthework assumed suchproportions that it was subsequentlydeemed
advisalsle to pul)lish it as a part of the series of Bulletins,devotinga Bulletintoeachlinguistic stock.(3).
Linguistic
families ofthe Indian
tribesnorth
ofMexico, with provisional
list ofthe
principal tribalnames and synonyms.
[1885]16°.
55
p.Note.
A
fewcopiesprintedfortheuseofthe compilersofaDictionaryofAmerican Indians[Handbook. SeeBulletin30]. Itiswithouttitle-page,name,ordate,Initwas compiled fromamanuscriptlistofIndian tribesby
James Mooney.(4).
[Map
of]Linguistic stocks
ofAmerican Indians north
ofMex-
ico
by
J.W. Powell.
[1891]Note.
A
limited editionof thismap, which
formsplate1 oftheSeventhAnnual
Report, was issued onheavy
paper, 19by
22 inclies, forthe use of students. Thismap
was revisedand published in theReport on IndiansTaxed
and NotTaxed
in theUnited States attheEleventhCensus, 1890. (See No.7.)(5).
Tribes
ofNorth America, with synonymy. Skittagetan fam-
ily. [1890]
"
4°.
13
p.Note.
A
fewcopiesprintedfortheuseofthe compilersoftheHandbook
ofAmeri- canIndians. Itwas preparedby
II.W.
HenshaAV, andcontainstwo samplesofstyle for theHandbook,
the second beginning on page 7 \\-ith the head, "Dictionaryof Indiantribalnames." (See Bulletin30.)(6).
Advance pages Smithsonian
InstitutionBureau
ofAmerican Ethnology — Dictionary
ofAmerican Indians north
ofMexico
. . .[Vignette]
Wasliington 1903
8°.
33
p.Note. Prepared
by
F.W.
Hodge.Two
hundred and fiftycopies printedby
the Smithsonian Institution for the use of the compilers of the Dictionary [Handbook.SeeBulletin30].
20 BUREAU OF AMERICAN ETHNOLOGY
[bull.49 (7).[Map
of]Linguistic stocks
ofAmerican Indians north
ofMexico by
J.W. Powell.
[1906]Note. Printed on
heavy
paperinadvanceoftheHandbook
ofAmerican
Indians (Bulletin 30), part1,ofwhich
itform-; anillustration.(8).
Bureau
ofAmerican Ethnology with
list ofpublications.
Keprinted from Handhook of American Indians, Bulletin 30
(i)t. 1),Bureau
ofAmerican Ethnology.
[1906]8°. 5 p.
(9).
Indian missions north
ofMexico by James Mooney. Re- printed from
FlamlhooJcof American Indians, Bulletin 30
(pt. 1),Bureau
ofAmerican 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
carvingsfrommounds
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
andCentralAmerican
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
NationalMonument,
visit to(Fewkes)B
50.The
cliff-ruins ofCanyon
deChelly in(C.Mindeleff)A
xvi, 73.See Casa Grande; Tusayan.
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
katcinasdrawn 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
6ofthelanguagesoftheNorth 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 languagesB
40.Kathlamettexts
B
26.The
CentralEskimo A
vi, 399.Tsimshiantexts
B
27.Bourke,JohnG.
The
medicine-menoftheApache A
ix,443.Bowditch, C. P. [Paperstranslated underthe supervisionofJ...B 28.
Brinton, DanielG.
The
graphic systemand ancientmethodsofthe
Mayas C
v(pt. 3), xvii.Bushnell,
David
I., jr. ChoctawofBayou 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
CentralAmerican
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
12.22 BUREAU OF AMERICAN" ETHNOLOGY
[bull.49(Pegihalanguage,
The
(Dorsey)C
vi.Central America, Indian languages of Mexico and (Thomas-
Swanton)
B
44.Numeral
systemsofMexico and
(Thomas)A
xix,853.Central
American
picture-writing.Studiesin(Holden)A
i,205.and Mexican
antiquitiesand
calendarsystems(Seler)B
28.CeremonialofHasjeltiDailjis
and
mythical sand paintingof theNavajo(J.Stevenson)
A
viii,229.Ceremonies,
Tusayan Snake
(Fewkes)A
xvi, 267.Ceremony,
The
Hako, aPawnee
(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
useofgoldand
othermetalsamong
theancient inhabitantsof (Holmes) .B 3.
Choctaw
dictionary (Byington),Swanton, editorB
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 Arizonain1879(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
oftheNorthAmericanIndiansA
xxiv.Cults, Siouan,
A
studyof(Dorsey)A
xi, 351.Cup-shaped andother lapidarian sculptures(Rau)
C
v.Cushing, F.
H.
OutlinesofZunicreationmyths 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