333 



INDEX. 



Charlevoix, Father, aboriginal fishing in Canada, 272. 

 Charred objects in lake-dwellings, 41, 43, 44, 57. 



Chenoweth, A. C., gold fish-hook, Cauca, 323. 

 Chinooks, salmon-fishing of the, 303. 



Chiriqui, fish-shaped gold figures from, 321. 

 Christensen, bone fish-hook, Pomerania, 72; flint points 



for fish-hooks, Germany, 122. 

 Clams, how taken by the WintiTns, 299. 

 Clavigero, F. X., Mexican fishing, 514. 

 Clay cones in lake-dwellings, GO; rings in lake-dwel- 

 lings, 62; vessels, fish-shaped, Arkansas, 211; Mis- 

 souri, 213; Peru, 329. 

 Climate of Europe in the palaeolithic ago, 1 ; neolithic 



age, 32. . 



'Cloth with inwoven fish-designs, Peru, 335. 

 Codfish-hooks of the Makahs, 16. 

 Collins, J. W., " devil's claw grapnel," 52. 



Cook, J., boats and methods of fishing in Nootka Sound, 



Prince William's Sound, and TJnalashka, 315-318. 



Cook, Gt. H., shell-heaps in New Jersey, 230. 



Copper, native, in North America, 138 ; working of, in 



North America, 138, 154. 

 Cortes, H., Mexican fish-ponds, etc., 213. 



Costa Rica, fish-carvings from, 321. 



Cox, J., bone fish-hooks, Ohio, 124, 127, 128; harpoon- 

 head, Ohio, 147. 



Crantz, D., fishing of the Greenlandcrs, 261. 



Craw-fish, how caught by the North Carolina Indians, 289. 



Curing fish, Indians of Canada, 270; Virginia, 285. 



dishing, F. H., bone fish-hook, New York, 125; sink- 

 ers, New York, 156. 



Dull, W. H., harpoon-heads of bone, Alaska, 143, 147, 



149, 151 ; Aleutian shell-heaps, 144, 256 ; copper- 

 working in Alaska, 154 ; species of mollusks in 

 Californian shell-heaps, 254, 256. 



Dawkins, W. B., early man in America, VI ; baton as 

 arrow-straightener, 29 ; harpoon-head, Victoria 

 Cave, 80. 



Dawson, J. W., harpoon-head, Nova Scotia, VI. 



De Bry, T. , aboriginal fishing in Virginia, 284. 



Decoys for seals, used by the natives of Nootka Sound, 

 313. 



De Laet, J., boats in Newfoundland, 266. 



Delaware and Iroquois fishing, 283. 



Desor, E., lacustrine clay ring, 62; boats of the lake- 

 dwellers, 67 ; on the bronze age, 98. 

 ' Devereux, J. H., copper sinker, Ohio, 181 ; fish-shaped 

 vessel, Arkansas, 211. 



"Devil's claw grapnel," 51. 



Domestic animals, none in reindeer-period, 6; of the 

 lake-dwellers, 44. 



Drift, animals of the European, 2; the North American, 

 115. 



Drift-implements in France and England, 1-4; North 

 America, 114. 



Driving fish, Delawares and Iroquois, 284 ; Southern 

 Indians, 291. 



Drying fish, Indians of North Carolina, 290. 



Dug-out discovered near Savannah, 188. 



Dug-outs in New England, 278, 279 ; of the Delawares, 

 283; Virginia Indians, 286, 287; California In- 

 dians, 290, 298, 300; Chinooks, 303; natives of 

 Nootka Sound, 313, 315. 



Dunn, J., salmon-fishing of the Chinooks, 303. 



Dupont, E., baton from the cave of Goyct, 29. 



Du Pratz, Le Pago, aboriginal fishing in Louisiana, 293. 



" Early Man in Europe," mentioned, VI. 



Eel (?) traced on a baton, La Madelaine, 31 ; eel-fishing, 

 aboriginal, in Canada, 270, 271 ; California, 298. 



Egcde, H., fishing of the Greenland Eskimos, 261. 



Ellis, W. , fish-hooks of the Society Islanders, 137. 



Eskimos formerly farther south, 115. 



Evans, J., harpoon-heads from Kent's Cavern, 25; flint 

 fish-hooks, Sweden and England, 70; sinkers, 

 England and Scotland, 87 ; classification of bronze 

 relics, 96; bronze fish-hook, Ireland, 109. 



Evers, E., fish-shaped vessel, Missouri, 213. 



Extinction of species in Europe, 2, 32, 36, 37, 43. 



Fascine-works in Swiss lakes, 40. 



Fauna of the European drift, 2; reindeer-period, 6; 

 neolithic age, 32; North American drift, 115; 

 North American shell-heaps, 220, 221, 222, etc. 



Fellenberg, E. de, boats from the Lake of Bienne, 106. 



Figuier, L., net-making in prehistoric times, 64. 



Fire-places in kjokkenrnoddings, 34 ; North American 

 shell-heaps, 221, 227, etc. 



Fire used in fishing, in the Carolinas, 284 ; Virginia, 289. 



Fish, abundance of, in American waters, 117. 



Fish carved on antler, La Madolaine, 27 ; on a bear's 

 tooth, Duruthy Grotto, 28 ; on a reindeer-jaw, 

 Laugcrie Basse, 28 ; on a baton, cave of Goyet, 29. 



Fish-cutters of stone, North American, 183. 



Fish-hooks of horn, bone, etc., lake-dwellings, 47; of 

 bone, Germany, 49, 72 ; Scania, 71 ; Dakota, 123; 

 Arkansas, 125; Indiana, 125; New York, 125, 

 126; Illinois, 126; Ohio, 124, 126, 127, 128; Cali- 

 fornia, 129; Greenland, 130; New Zealand, 137; 

 of flint, Sweden, 69; of roindeer-horn, Norway, 

 72 ; Arctic America, 130 ; of bronze, Switzerland, 

 99-104, passim; Germany, 102, 110; Italy, 103; 

 Savoy, 103; British Isles, 109; Denmark, 109; 

 fiint-pointod, Greenland, 120; Rtigcn, 121; of 

 deer-horn, New York, 128; of shell (including 

 mode of manufacture), California, 131-135; Sa- 

 moa, 136; of turtle-shell, Serle Island, 136; of 

 copper, Wisconsin, 138; Peru, 324; of cactus- 

 spines, used by the Mohaves, how made, 139; of 

 gold, Cauca, 323. 



Fishing-arrows, Louisiana, 293. 



Fishing-implements scarce in the European stone age, 

 68. 



Fishing-scene on a scapula, Laugerie Basso, 29. 



Fish-pen in New York, 200. 



Fish-preserves in Georgia, 197. 



Fish-rakes of the Chinooks, 304; natives of Nootka 

 Sound, 315, 316. 



