ETHNOLOGY. 13 



TunuJcs made Louses out of stone.* They Avere able to lift large stones. 

 We were afraid of them; we fought with them and killed them. They 

 (the Tun ids) came in the first i)lace from Greenland. f The women made 

 clothes fi'om their own hair. They had no dogs at that time, but they 

 made sledges and harnesses, aud finally {witchou = hy and by) put the 

 harnesses on three rocks, one white, one red, and one black; they then 

 called, and when they looked they found the stones had been trans- 

 formed into dogs. After a time they got jilenty dogs; then they went 

 about more. The present Eskimo could not understand their language. 

 They lived to a great age {U. tukewouk nami = did not die!). Far to the 

 west some Eskimo lately saw some Tumilis; they had bear-skin cloth- 

 ing. In the Tumiks land (where?) the music ox {oming muk), bear, and 

 seals are abundant. They build walls of stones on the land, and drive 

 the reindeer into ponds, and catch them in kyacks. They have a large, 

 long callytong (coat, or jumper jacket) that they fasten down around 

 them on the ice while they are watching a seal's hole; underneath this 



* Vide sketch of foixndation, No. 1. Stone foundations of a somewhat peculiar pat- 

 tern are found in many of the larger fjords. The subject of the sketch was about four- 

 teen feet in its greatest diameter (the larger enclosure) inside ; the smaller one about 

 ten feet. The arrangement is much the same as the Eskimo use at the present day, a 

 raised platform in the end opposite the entrance for a sleeping and general lounging 

 place, and two smaller platforms on either side, where the lamps are kept, and where 

 the garbage accumulates. 



These foundations are now mere ruins. Some of the stones in the walls are so largo 

 that it must have required the united efforts of several men to jilace them in pogiition. 

 The stones gradually diminish in size from the foundation upward. Standing walls are 

 from two to three feet high, and might have been a foot higher, to judge from the 

 loose stones lying about. There was probably a fi-ame-work of whale ribs, over which 

 the seal-skin covering was spread. 



On the north side of this foundation were seven kyacks, built of small stones; they 

 lie parallel to each other, and are from ten to fifteen feet in length; they are built of 

 a single row of stones, and only one tier high. These are said to indicate the number 

 of inmates that have died. They appear to us more like the work of children. In 

 the lamp-places we found the remains of Pagomys fcctidus (abundant), Phoca harhata, 

 Cistopliora cristata, THclieclms rosmarus, Ursus maritimus (the three last-named species 

 occur now only as stragglers in the vicinity), Eangifcr tarandus, Beluga catodon, Larus 



?, and Somateria ? {mollissima, probably). Other bones are found, but not 



recognizable from decay. No implements were found except a stone skin-scraper. 

 The present Eskimo say these stone foundations were made by the Tunuks. They are 

 foimd in various out-of-the-way places, especially in the greater Kingwah Fjord. 



t Aboiit twenty years ago, a man and women (Greenlandcrs) lauded near Cape Mercy, 

 having got adrift on a piece of ice on the Greenland coast. From this occiu-rence we 

 coujecturc that the story has received a modern addition. 



