52 



INDEX. 



Page. 



D. 



Davia. See Squier and Davis. 



Delaware salt-kettle pottery 27 



stone graves 28, 50 



tradition of migration applies to 



Cherokees 43 



De Soto cited on mound 10 



Dumont on Natchez mounds H 



on mound pottery 23 



Du Pratz on burial mounds 11 



on square bouses 17, 18 



on native pottery 23 



Dwellings of Indians and mound-builders 



similar 15 



E. 



Earle found a copper plate in Illinois 30 



Early French voyages, Shea, cited 10 



Enes possible builders of some works in 



Ohio 50 



Essex County, Mass., pipes from graves in 39 



Essex mounds, Clinton County, Mich 13 



Etowah burial mounds 10,29 



European articles in mound graves 33 



Excursion through Slave States, Featber- 



stonhaugh, cited , 12 



Eeatherstonhaugh on burial mounds 12 



Fire in mortuary ceremonies 22 



Florida, residence mounds in 10 



burial mounds in 20 



Force on direction of Indian migration 47 



Fort "Wayne treaty as to salt grant 27 



Fowke, Gerard, found council-house mound 53 



Fox burial mound 13 



mortuary use of fire 22 



G. 



Gallatin County, 111., .salt-kettle pottery. 24, 20, 27 



Garcilasso de Vega on mound-buililiug 10 



Gazetteer of Illinois, J. M. Peck, cited 26 



the States of Illinois and Mis- 

 souri, Lewis C. Beck, cited. . 12 



Georgia, burial mounds in 19, 20, 29 



burial under dwellings in 21 



Gravier on mound-building 10 



H. 



Hale, Horatio, on Indian migrations 41,42 



on identity of the Namaes 



Sipu Kiver 46, 47 



Haywood on Cherokee tradition of mounds 



on the Oliio 46 



on Indian migration 47 



Hcckewelder, J(,hn, on Indian works 11 



on removal of bones 



for burial 20 



on Delaware tradition 



of migration 43,45 



Herrera on mound-building 10 



Historical reminiscences of Summit 

 ('ounty, Ohio, L. V. Bierce, cited 12 



Page. 



History of Alabama, Pickett, cited 22 



Carolina, Lawson, cited 21,34 



Illinois, Reynolds, cited 29 



Kentucky, Collins, cited 27 



the Five Nations, Colden, cited. 11 

 the Indians, Schoolcraft, cited . 26 

 the Manners and Customs of the 

 Indian Tribes, John Hecke- 



welder, cited 1 1, 20, 43-45 



the North American Indians, 



Adair, cited 21,23,34,35 



Virginia, Beverly, cited 34 



Holmes, W. H., on engraved shells 30 



on Indian fabric 36 



Homsher, G. "W., on Indian mounds 50 



Houses of Indians and mound-builders per- 

 ishable 15 



rectangular 16 



square 17, 18 



Howland, H. H., found a copper plate in 



Illinois 30 



Hunter on stone graves 28 



Huron burial mounds 18, 21 



I. 



Illinois, sites of houses identified in 15 



burial mounds in 20, 21, 24 



stone graves in 28 



copper plate found in 30 



and Ohio, mound-builders in, prob- 

 able identity of 49 



Indian migrations 41-50 



mound-builders of Mississippi Val- 

 ley and Gulf States 7 



Indiana, pipes in 42 



Indians and mound-builders— 



similar socially 18 



in burial customs 18, 19, 22, 23 



in use of stone 22, 23 



in pottery 22, 23 



Ingals, Mary, first white woman in Ken- 

 tucky, captive 27 



Iowa, mountls in 21 



pipes in 42 



Iron blade from North Carolina mound 31 



Iroquoian works in New York 18 



connection of Cherokees 42 



J. 



Jeflferson. Thomas, on Indiaii mounds in 

 Virginia 11,19,20 



Jesuit Relations cited 11,21,22 



Jones, C.C., on burial mounds 20 



on burial under dwellings 21 



on stone graves 28, 29 



on pipes 36, 42 



Jones, Joseph, on Tennessee stone graves. . 26 



K. 



Kanawha mounds connect those of Ohio and 

 Tennessee 47, 48 



Kent, M. B.,on Sac and Fox mortuary use 

 of fire 22 



