CULTUEE OF PEOPLE OF SOUTHEASTERN PANAMA 133 



Prince, J. Dtneley. Grammar and Glossary of the Tula Language of Panama. 

 American Anthropologist, vol. 15, No. 3 (n. s.), 1913. 



Publicaciones del " Boletin " de la Real Sociedad Geografica. Excursion a la 

 Costa de San Bias, en Panama. Madrid, 1916. 



Restrepo, Ernesto. Estoudios sobre los aborigines de Columbia. Bogota, 1892. 

 Contains observations on the tribes of the Isthmian interior, especially of 

 the Guaymie and Paya Tribes. The writer did not penetrate to the Carib- 

 bean coast of Darien. 



Roth, Walter E. An Introductory Study of the Arts, Crafts, and Customs of 

 the Guiana Indians. 38th Annual Report Bureau of American Ethnology, 

 1917. 



Sapper, Karl. Beitraege zur Ethnographie des suedlichen Mittelamerika. 

 Petermanns Mitteilungen, vol. 47, page 25, 1901. 



Selfridge, T. O. Reports of Explorations, Surveys, etc. Government Print- 

 ing Office, Washington. D. C, 1874. Contains extensive notes on the Sasardi, 

 Sucubti, and Paya Indians of Darien and of the Chepo district. 



Smithsonian Miscellaneous Collections, vol. 77, No. 2, pages 77-83; 



112-127. Contains selected notes and observations relating to the ethnology 

 of the Choco, Cuna, and Tule Tribes : also a study of Tule music by Miss 

 Densmore. 



Steese, J. G. San Bias Indians Leaving Their Isolation. Bulletin of the 

 American Geographic Society, vol. 47, page 773. New York, 1915. 



Thomas and Swanton. Indian Languages of Mexico and Central America, 

 1911. Bulletin 44, Bureau of American Ethnology. The best published work 

 on the languages of Central America. The monograph should be consulted 

 in connection with Chamberlain's distribution map of the linguistic stocks 

 of the South American Indians. 



Verrill, A. Hyatt. Panama, Past and Present. New York, 1921. A rather 

 comprehensive popular account of the history, resources, geography, plant 

 and animal life, and of the various peoples of Panama. 



Wafer, Lionel. A New Voyage and Description of the Isthmus of America. 

 Reprinted from the original London edition of 1699 by George P. Winship. 

 Cleveland, 1903. The author was a keen observer of local flora and fauna 

 and of the daily life and social organization of the aboriginal Indian tribes 

 among whom he lived as hostage for two years. The best early account con- 

 cerning the tribes of the interior, near the headwaters of the Savannah 

 River and of the " Samballoes " (San Bias) coast Indians. 



Zeitschrift fuer Ethnologic 1873, page 311. Valuable for the dis- 

 cussion relative to village sites, population, family names, and kinship terms 

 of the San Bias coast Indians. 



