104 



INDEX. 



Rattles made of shells, 08. 



&quot; of clay, 85. 

 Relics, prehistoric, from Europe, 4. 



&quot; of bone and horn from California 

 and New York, 03. 



Santa Barbara Islands, 31, C3, 88. 



Schoolcralt, Mr., 33, 43. 



Schumacher, Mr. Paul, 31, 37, 51, 63, 70, 72, 

 91. 



Scraper-like implements, 25, 26. 



Scrapers, different shapes of, 13. 

 &quot; with handles, 13. 



Sculptures, 54, 55, 57. 



Serpentine, material for vessels, 37. 



Shell-money, 70. 



Shells used for ornament, 51, 52, 66, 69. 



Shells^utensils of. Mi, G7. 



Silver, traces of, (X). 



Smith, Captain John, 59. 



Smithsonian Contributions to Knowledge, 

 45. 



Spade-like implements, 25, 26. 



Spear-heads, different shapes of, 11, 12. 



* resemble large arrow-heads, 



10. 



Spear-heads, so-called, used with handles, 

 10. 



Specimens from Central and South Amer 

 ica, 4. 



Spindle-whorls, Mexican, 87. 



Sijuier, Mr. E. ti., i. 



Squier & Davis. Messrs., 45, 46, 48. 

 Statuettes, Mexican, 86. 

 Stevens. Mr. E. T., 45. 

 Stone as raw material, 7. 

 &quot; flaked and chipped, 7. 

 &quot; implements, IX). 



&quot; their use, often doubt 



ful, 2. 



Stone knives for cutting leather, 2. 

 Stone, pecked, ground and polished, 17. 

 Stone plates, 37. 



&quot; vessels, 36. 

 Stones, club-head-shaped, 31. 



&quot; discoidal, used in Indian games, 



28, 29. 

 Stones, egg-shaped, 32. 



&quot; used in grinding and polishing, 



34,35. 



Striped slate, material for ornaments, 53. 

 System adopted in arranging the Smith 

 sonian collection relating to North 

 American Ethnology, 97. 



Tablets, piereed, 32, 33. 



Teeth, perforated for ornaments, 64. 



Terra-cotta figures, 84. 



Tilhuggersteene, 22. 



Tissues and implements from China and 



Japan, 5. 

 Tomahawks, 21. 



Tools used by modern Indians, 22. 

 Torquemada, 8. 



Toy canoes, 88. 

 Trichecus manatus, 46. 

 Tubes, 43, 44. 



&quot; ornaments or amulets, 43. 

 Tylor. Mr. E.B., 8. 

 Typical objects only described, 5. 



Unalaska, ice-chisel from, 18. 

 Utensils made of shells, 67. 



Vases, Mexican, 82, 84. 

 Venegas, 44. 

 Verazzano, 59. 



Vessels of clay for culinary purposes, 73. 

 &quot; etone, 36. 



\Vampum-beads, 68. 



Weapons of parade, drilled, 23, 24. 



Weapons, utensils, etc. from Asia, Africa, 



Australia, etc., 4. 

 Wedges or Celts, 17. 

 Weights for fishing-lines, 26. 

 Whipple, Lieut., 81. 

 Whistles of bird-bones, 63. 



clay, 85. 

 Whittlesey, Mr. Charles, 59. 

 Wilkes, Capt., 5. 

 Williams, Roger, 62, 68. 70. 

 Wood, manufactures of. 88. 

 Wyman, Prof. Jeffries, 71. 



Yarrow, Dr. H. C., 31. 



