INDEX. 



341 



Sauvago, II. E., fishing in the reindeer-period, 4, 11, 12. 

 Scarfing of canoes, Makahs, 309. 



Schoolcruft, H. R., bone fish-hook, Cunningham's Island, 

 126. 



Schumacher, P., bait-holder (?) of jasper, Oregon, 117; 

 manufacture of shell fish-hooks, California, 134; 

 shell-heaps in Oregon, 249. 



Seal-figure traced on a bear's tooth, Duruthy Grotto, 32. 



Seal-catching of the Grecnlanders, 2G4 ; natives of Noot- 

 ka Sound, 313. 



Sea-ottcr-hunting of the natives of Nootka Sound, 311. 



Shell-deposits, artificial, in Denmark, 33 ; North Amer- 

 ica, 216. 



Shells, species of, in kjokkenmoddings, 36; North Amer- 

 ican shell-heaps, 216-200, passim. 



Shoshonees, fishing of the, 294. 



Silver fish-figures from one of the Chincha Islands, etc., 

 332. 



Sinkers of stone, notched, Switzerland, 59 ; North Amer- 

 ica, 157-160; Nicaragua, 319; grooved, Switzer- 

 land, 59 ; Scotland, 85, 86 ; England, 87 ; Ireland, 

 88; Denmark, 89; North America, 161-164 ; Nica- 

 aragua, 319, 320; perforated, Switzerland, 59, 60; 

 Ireland, 88, 89; North America, 165-167; Nica- 

 ragua, 320; of clay, Switzerland, GO; Germany, 

 62, 91; Nicaragua, 319; for fishing-lines, North 

 American, of stone and other materials, smooth, 

 incised, knobbed, perforated, etc., 167-183 ; of cop- 

 per, Ohio, 180; of shell, North America, 182. 



Skeletons, human, rare in lake-dwellings, 41. 



Skin canoes of tha Unalashkans, 317. 



Slave and Dogrib Indians, fishing of the, 276. 



Slaves employed to fish by the inhabitants of Nootka 

 Sound, 311. 



Sloan, J., bone fish-hook, Indiana, 125. 



Smelt-fishing, aboriginal, in California, 297. 



Smith, E. J., gold fish-hooks, Cauca, 323. 



Smith, J., fish-hooks in Virginia, 122 ; aboriginal fishing 

 in Virginia, 287. 



Snyder, J. F., bone fish-hook, Illinois, 120; anchor- 

 stones, Illinois, 193. 



Social condition of the cave-inhabitants of the Vezere 

 Valley, 9 ; Danish coast-dwellers, 35 ; Swiss lake- 

 men, 41, 97. 



Social rank in the reindeer-period, 8. 



Squier, E. G., and Davis, E. H., sinker from Ohio, 164 ; 

 plummets, 168; platform-pipes with fish-figures, 

 Ohio, 205. 



Squier, E. G., harpoon-head of bone, New York, 145; 

 fishing-tackle from Pachacamac, 324 ; silver fish- 

 figures from one of the Chincha Islands, 332. 



Steaming of canoes, Makahs, 309. 



Stcenstrup, J. S., age of kjokkenmoddings, 35; use of 

 meteoric iron in Greenland, 263. 



Stevens, E. T., plummet in the Blackmore Museum, 173. 



Stone implements in the palaeolithic age, 2, 114; Dor- 

 dogne caves, 6; neolithic age, 33; kjokkenmod- 

 dings, 35; lake-dwellings, 41; North American 

 shell-heaps, 218-260, passim. 



Stone, L., fishing of the McCloud River Indians, 302. 



Stone, W. L., fish-pen in New York, 201. 

 Sturgeon-fishing, aboriginal, in New England, 279; 



Virginia, 289 ; of the Chinooks, 303. 

 Suckers, aboriginal fishing of, in Nevada, 301. 

 Superstitions connected with fishing, 272, 275, 290, 303, 



305. 

 Swan, J. G., Mitkalis, ii.-hing O f the, 12, 14, 305; their 



halibut-hooks, 14; codfish-hooks, 15; Chinooks, 



fishing of the, 305; canoes of the Ilaidahs, 310. 



Tertiary man, 1, 116. 



Textile fabrics of the lake-dwellers, 43. 



Tooker, W. W., shell-heaps in Long Island, 225. 



Toy-boats, 67, 190. 



Trenton gravels, 114. 



Trill, C. F., artist, VII. 



Troyon, F., harpoons of the lake-dwellers, 54; boats of 



the lake-dwellers, 67. 

 Tule boats (or rafts) of the Makhelchels, 299; Yokuts, 



300; Pai-Utcs, 301. 

 Twine-making of the Shoshonees, 294. 



Umiak, of the Greenlanders, 263 ; Alaskans, 31C. 



Unalashka Island, canoes and fishing in, 317. 



" Underrunning rock," 196. 



Unilateral barbs, effects of, 20, 152. 



United States Commission of Fish and Fisheries, V, VI. 



Van der Donck, A., aboriginal fishing in the New Neth- 

 erlands, 281. 



Vezere River, caves on the, 5. 



Viards, fishing of the, 298. 



Victoria Cave, bone harpoon-head from, 80. 



Village-sites in Oregon, 249. 



Virchow, K. , reference to clay sinkers in Prussia, 91. 



Virginia, aboriginal fishing in, 284-289. 



Vogt, C., extinction of the great auk, 36. 



Toss, A., catalogue of German antiquities exhibited at 

 Berlin, 68. 



Wailakkis, fishing of the, 298. 



Walker, S. T., shell-hea-ps in Florida, 246. 



Wampum, New England, 277. 



War-arrows, Louisiana, 293. 



Weaving of the lake-dwellers, 61. 



Weirs of the Greenlanders, 261 ; Virginia Indians, 285, 

 288 ; Yuroks, W ; McCloud River Indians, 302. 



Whale-fishing of the Greenlanders, 262; Makahs, 306, 

 307; natives of Nootka Sound, 311. 



Whales, uses of, among the Makahs, 307. 



White, C. A., shell-heaps in Iowa, 241. 



White-fish, Indian mode of catching, in Michigan, 273. 



Wicomico Indians of Maryland, 236. 



Wiener, C., fish-shaped vessels, Peru, 330; cloth with 

 fish-designs, Peru, 335. 



Wilde, Sir W., Irish sinkers, 88; boats, 91 ; bronze fish- 

 hook, 109. 



Williams, J. J.,cave near Santo Domingo, Mexico, 100. 



Williams, R., aboriginal fishing in New England, 277. 



Wintuns, fishing of the, 299. 



