INDEX. 



339 



Fisli-remains in the Vezore caves, 10; kjolckcnmoddings, 

 30 ; lake-dwellings, 45 ; North American shell- 

 heaps, 218-2G0, passim. 



ITish-shnped vessels, North America, 212 ; Peru, 329. 



Floats for harpoons, 21 ; for lines and nets in lake-dwel- 

 lings, 49, 63 ; none prehistoric in North America. 

 141 ; with arrows, Louisiana, 293. 



Florida, aboriginal fishing in, 291. 



Forging iron, natives of Nootka Sound, 314. 



Friedel, E., bait-holders of flint, Prussia, 69; of bronze, 

 Switzerland, 99; javelin-heads, Prussia, 82; an- 

 chor-stones, Prussia, 87,94; boats, Prussia, 91, 110. 



Frontispiece, note, 102. 



Gaines, A. S., and Cunningham, K. M., shell-heaps in 



Alabama, 249. 

 Gastaldi, B., wooden anchor, Mercurago, 67 ; boat, Mer- 



curago, 108. 

 Georgia, aboriginal fishing in, 291. 

 Geruerd, J. M. M., stone sinkers, Su.squehanna Valley, 



1-57. 

 Gill, T., Peruvian fish-figures, 332, 334. 

 Glacial man, condition of, 1. 

 Goering, A., pile-dwellings in Venezuela, 38. 

 Gold figures, fish-shaped, Chiriqui, 321. 

 Goyet, cave of, 29. 



Gratz, prehistoric net from JIammoth Cave (?), 155. 

 Greenland, fishing of the Eskimos in, 261-266. 

 Grewingk, C, harpoon-heads in marl of Estland, V. 

 Grooved sinkers, .59, 85-88, 89, 101-164, 319, 320. 

 Gross, v., harpoons of lake-dv/ellers, 55. 



Haidahs, canoes of the, 310. 



Halibut-hooks, Makahs, 14. 



Haynes, H. "W., Trenton gravels, 115. 



Harpoon-arrows, La Madelaine, 23. 



Harpoon-heads of reindeer-horn, France, 16, 18, 19, 23; 

 England, 25; Switzerland, 25; of deer-horn, 

 Switzerland, 52, 5o ; New York, 145, 150, 152 ; of 

 bone, Switzerland, 54; Scania, 73; Seeland, 73, 77; 

 Funen,77; Jutland, 77; Tierra del Fuego, 77 ; Vic- 

 toria Cave, 80 ; in colonial times, 142 ; California, 

 143 ; Maine, 143, 144, 148, 151 ; Alaska, 144, 148, 

 149, 151 ; Puget Sound, 145 ; New York, 145, 1 50 ; 

 Ohio, 147 ; Michigan, 147, 149 ; of ox-horn, Po- 

 land, 78 ; of stone, Europe, 83 ; North America, 

 141 ; of elk-horn. New York, 146 ; of copper, 

 Wisconsin, 1-52 ; Alaska, 154. 



Harpoons and fish-hooks, priority in time, 12, 141. 



Harpoons of the cave-men, 16, 22 ; Eskimos and North- 

 west Coast Indians, 20 ; lake-dwellers, 52; South- 

 ern Indians, 291 ; Makahs, 306 ; natives of Nootka 

 Sound, 311, 316. 



Hearne, S., fi.shing of the Northern Indians, 274. 



Hcnaggi Indians, dug-outs of the, 298. 



Henry, A., aboriginal fi.shing in Michigan, 273. 



Herring and shad, former spread of, in New York, 203. 



Hofl'man, W. J., bone fish-hook, Dakota, 123. 



Horse-figure delineated on a baton. La Madelaine, 27; 

 horse-heads traced on antler. La Madelaine, 31. 



House-sites in Greenland shell-heaps, 219. 

 Hurons, aboriginal fishing of the, 208. 



Ice-picks (?) of flint in the European drift, 4. 

 Implements of the drift, 2; reindeer-period, ; neolithic 

 age, 33 ; kjokkenmoddings, 35; lake-dwellers, 41. 

 Iroquois, fishing of the, 283. 

 Irving, "W., pile-dwellings in Venezuela, 38. 



Javelin-heads of bone with inserted flakes of flint, Scania, 



81 ; Prussia, 82. 

 Jogues, I., shell-heaps in New York, 216. 

 Johnson, E., fish-shooting, New England Indians, 278. 

 Jones, C. C, stone sinkers, 165; dug-out exhumed near 



Savannah, 188 ; ancient fish-preserves in Georgia, 



197 ; shell-heaps in Georgia, 242. 

 Jones, J. M., shell-heaps in Nova Scotia, 221, 

 Jones, S., fish-hooks of the Kutchin Indians, 122. 

 Jordan, F., shell-heaps in Delaware, 2-30. 

 Josselyn, J., aboriginal fishing in New England, 279. 



Kalm, P. , shell-heaps in the Atlantic States, 217 ; aborigi- 

 nal fishing in New York and New Jerse,v, 281. 



Kayaks of the Greenlanders, 264 ; Alaskans, 316. 



Keith, M. C, carving of fish from Costa Rica, 320. 



Keller, F., lake-dwellings, 37-68, 97-109, passim. 



Kent's Cavern, 9 ; harpoon-heads from, 25. 



Kesslerloch, 9 ; harpoon-heads from, 24. 



"Killick," 196. 



Kjokkenmoddings, or kitchen-middens, 33-37. 



Klemm, G., flint sinkers and anchor-stones, Heligoland 

 and Kiigen, 87 ; flint-pointed fish-hook, Green- 

 land, 120. 



Knight of Elvas, Indian nets, 156. 



Lake-dwellings, 37-68, 97-109 ; construction of, 40, 97. 



Lake-settlements, ago and duration of, 39, 98. 



Lartet, E., and Christy, H., Dordogne caves, 5-32, passim. 



Lartet, E., fishing of the cave-men, 10. 



Lartet, L., and Duparc, C, exploration of Duruthy 



Grotto, 28. 

 Lawson, J., aboriginal fishing in North Carolina, 289. 

 Le Hon, H., bone arrow-head, Saint-Aubin, 47. 

 Le Jeune, Le P., aboriginal eel-fishing in Canada, 271. 

 Lewis, E., shell-heaps in Long Island, 227. 

 Lewis, H. C, age of the Trenton gravels, 114. 

 Lloyd, T. G. B., boats of the Beothucs, 266. 

 Looms of the lake-dwellers, 61. 



Loskiel, G. H., fishing of Delawares and Iroquois, 283. 

 Louisiana, aboriginal fishing in, 293. 

 Lubomirski, J. T., fish-spear-heads, Poland, 78. 

 Lyell, Sir C, fauna of the Dordogne caves, 5; boats from 



the Scottish silt, 92 ; shell-heaps in Massachusetts 



and Georgia, 217. 



Macedo, J. M., fish-shaped vessels, Peru, 331. 

 McGuire, J. D., shell-heaps in Maryland, 237. 

 Mackenzie, A., fishing of the Slave and Dogrib Indians, 

 276. 



