148 



INDEX 



Mounds — Page 

 Alabama, pottery from, re- 

 sembling Antillean 88, 91 



Arawak, described 45 



natural, described 44 



natural, mentioned 43 



no burials in 45 



of upright stones 46 



use of 46 



Museum of the American In- 

 dian, mention of 25,123 



Narratives, historical, relating 



to Santo Domingo 22-24 



NoRDENSKioLD, reference to 132 



Nose, modeling of 85 



Ober, mention of work of 24 



Ocean currents, effect of, on 



West Indies 13 



Orinoco River — 



earthenware from valley of _ 131 

 influence of, on Lesser An- 



tiUes 13 



OVIEDO 



reference to 20 



work by 23 



Paint, chronology determined 



by 66-57 



Panaman ceramics, compared 



with Santo Domingan 129-130 



Pane, Ramon — 



investigations of, among the 



natives 19 



manuscript notes of 19 



natives studied by 22 



Panel form of decoration. _ 54 

 Parana Delta, ornamental de- 

 signs on pottery of 132 



Paste — 



discussion of 8 



kinds of 61 



Patagonia, pottery making in_ 47 

 Patination, removed by clean- 

 ing 8 



Peabody Museum, mention of. 6 



Pearl Island, pottery from 72 



Peru, similarity in pottery of, 



to that of Santo Domingo 132 



Pestles — 



of pottery 95-97 



of shell 95 



stone, from Samana 95 



Petit Anse, first French set- 

 tlement at 17 



Petroglyphs — Page 



near village of Mara 37 



Tainan, regarded as Phoe- 

 nician 26 



PiCTOGRAPHS, on stono in- 



closures 47 



Pin ART, effigy figured by 87-88 



Pipes, tobacco bowl, occur- 

 rence of 109 



Pits, as decorative detail, where 



found 62 



Plates, earthenware 60 



Polygamy, reference to prac- 

 tice of 16 



Pomeroon shell heaps, con- 

 clusions regarding 128 



Pong, assistance rendered by 44 



Population — 



Dominican, nationality of__ 1 



Indian, decrease of 2 



Samana 33-34 



stocks included in 2 



Porto Rico — 



classification of pottery of- _ 72-74 

 pottery of, described by 



Fewkes 52 



Pottery — 



Alabama, compared with 



Santo Domingan 120 



Arawak, characteristics of. _ 3-4 



buried with the dead 40 



Carib, compared with 



Arawak 51 



ceremonial, few examples of. 9 

 classification of, by Holmes. 109 

 collections of, in museums. . 5-6 

 decorated, stability in fea- 

 tures of 6 



development of 3 



earliest type of 67 



from burials 39-40,59,66-67 



from cave middens 34 



from open village sites 7 



gourd-shaped 61 



intact, depth at which 



found 7 



island Arawak, classification 



of 51 



knobbed 67 



Mandan and Hidatsa 49-50 



method used in describing. . 7-8 



mortuary, not " killed " 59 



of eastern United States, 



elements characterizing. _ 107 



