Ethnology of the Pacific Coast 

 The trip by steamship among the islands and 

 fiords of the coast of British Columbia and Alaska 

 is one of the wonders of America. The Indian vil- 

 lages are sometimes difficult to reach, but when 

 once seen are picturesque enough to repay the 

 trouble. Totem poles in front of Indian houses are 

 to be seen at Ketchikan, Wrangel and other places 

 which are regular ports of call for the steamers. 

 The quaint old town of Sitka is perhaps most 

 worthy of a visit, both on account of its Indians, 

 and because of the reminders it contains of the old 

 Russian occupation. The region offers a variety of 

 quite unusual scenery, which is in places romantic 

 beyond description. 



REFERENCES 



THE SOUTHWEST 

 DORSET, G. A. 



1903. Indians of the Southwest. Pass. Dept., Atchison, 

 Topeka & Santa Fe Railway Company. 

 GODDARD, P. E. 



1913. Indians of the Southwest. Amer. Mus. Nat. Hist., 

 Handbook ser., no. 2, 191 pp. (Both of the fore- 

 going works contain maps and bibliographies.) 

 SMITHSONIAN INSTITUTION, BUREAU OF AMERICAN 

 ETHNOLOGY. 

 1907-10. Handbook of American Indians, Bull. 30, 2 vols., 

 pp. ix+972, iv+1221, 1 map. (Includes articles by 

 various authors on all phases of Southwestern life, 

 alphabetically arranged.) 



CALIFORNIA 

 UNIVERSITY OF CALIFORNIA. 



1903-15. Publications in American Archaeology and Eth- 

 nology. 



NORTHWEST COAST 

 BOAZ, FRANZ. 

 1897. The decorative art of the Indians of British Columbia. 

 Amer. Mus. Nat. Hist., Bull. 9, pp. 123-170. 



1906. Tribes of the North Pacific Coast. Ontario Arch- 

 aeological Rep., pp. 235-249. 



EMMONS, G. T. 



1903. The basketry of the Tlingit. Amer. Mus. Nat. Hist., 

 Memoirs, vol. 3, pp. 229-277. 



1907. The Chilkat blanket. Amer. Mus. Nat. Hist, 



Memoirs, vol. 2, pp. 329-400. 

 PROVINCIAL MUSEUM, VICTORIA, B. C. 



1909. Guide to the anthropological collection, pp. viii+69, 

 1 map. (Contains a useful map showing Indian 

 villages.) 



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