562 Gunnar Landtman. 



Hair; smearing the hair with oil, no. 4 A, B, 121 A, p. 321; with ashes, p. 104; magic wrought 

 by means of hair, p. 129, 130, 201; women eut their hair at pregnancy, no. 157 A, 

 no. 216. 



History; legendary history, wanderings of the people, chapter II (no. 1—20), p. 521; see also War 

 and fighting, chapter XIII (no. 332 — 364); superstitious fear cause the people to leave 

 their old home, .p. 471. See Travelling. 



Houses, pp. 5 sq.; people and beings living in the ground. p. (^~, no. 43, 58, 162, 170, p. 272, 

 no. 272 D, 450; living under the protruding i-oot of a ti'ee, no. 59; inside large trees, no. 

 16, 45, 48, 56 G, 109, p. 234, 241, no. 161, Kvi, 172 B, 197, 477; in rocl<.s, no. 48, 52, 

 54, 102, p. 521; people build houses on tall posts or take refuge in trees in order to put 

 themselves beyond the reach of their pursuers, no. 102, 135, 154, 163, 172, 367, 459, 

 459 A; the ancient Mâubo people still live in their house inside the water, no. 279 B, C; 

 the building of houses, no. 1 A, p. 66, no.. 3, p. 78, 79, 87, 88, no. 43, 58, 483; putting up 

 shelters for temporary use, no. 3, p. 85, no. 58; magic in house-building, no. 26; the 

 ordinary doors are not used for certain purposes, p. 351; the name of a house, no. 43 C; 

 association of a house with a pig, no. 43 C; fabulously large houses, p. 1 15, 143; the 

 men's house (dårimo), p. 6, 12, 68, 73, 76, 77, 78, 79, no. 22, p. 166, no. 256, p. 339, 

 no. 279, 350; the érection of a men's house, no. 57 L; several men's houses in one and 

 the same village, no. 470. 



Hunting and fishing, general description, pp. 10 sq.; hunting incidents, no. 7, 62, 175, 312—321, 

 p. 521; harpooning incidents, no. 86, 89, 277,288, 299, 327—331, 334, 399; adventure 

 with a shark and sting-ray, no. 292: adventures with crocodiles, ses Animais; famous 

 hunters, no. 15, 45—50; the first harpooner of dugong, no. 61; hunting methods, no. 317, 

 320, 478; methods of catching birds, no. 370, 371; of spearing dugong, no. 55; of catching 

 crabs, no. 442; of fishing. no. 23, 24, 40, p. 133, no. 117, p. 205, no. 123, p. 228, no. 

 154, 163, 168, 176, 181, p. 318, no. 323, 348, 382, 465; fabulous methods of fishing, no. 

 374 — 377; teaching the people hunting and fishing methods, see Teaching; hunting and 

 fishing implements, see Implements. Magic: „medicines" used for making people successful 

 harpooners, p. 343; given to dögs, p. 85, no. 50 A, p. 216, p. 341; magic used in hunt- 

 ing_ and shooting, p. 125, 133, 148, 521; in harpooning dugong, p. 122, no. 283, 286, p. 

 352, 287, 486; in spearing turtle, no. 253, 284, 286; in catching crabs, no. 103; in fishing, 

 no. 129, 287. 



Images, human; used in certain cérémonies, p. 13, no. 57 L, 256, p. 3.50 sq., no. 286. 



Implements, objects; general description, pp. 7 sq. Methods of ivork: sawing wood with a twisted 

 bamboo rope, p. 83; felling a tree by making a fire round it and cutting off the charred 

 parts, no. 23 D; carrying things in the arm-guard, p. 312, no. 248; the making of stone 

 axes, no. 49; using shells and bamboo knives for cutting meat, no. 464; a .swimmer car- 

 l'ies certain things with him by tying them on to his body or hair, no. 4M. Drunis: the 

 making of a drum, and magic „medicine" applied to it, no. 22; the first drum ever made, 

 no. 278; a drum made out of a human body, no. 47 C, D, 56 A, B, D; Mérave's famous 

 drum, no. .56; a drum when being beaten calls out a certain name, no. 22, p. 117, 118, 

 no. 56 E. Othcr sound-producing instruments: pan-pipe, no. 412; bullroarer and „me- 



Tom. .M.VIl 



