uRDLicKA] PHYSIOLOGICAL AND MEDICAL OBSERVATIONS 409 



BoussENAHi), L. Lc "meclocin" clicz Ics I'caux-Rnugcs de la guyaiic l'raii(;aise. 



Rev. sciont., Paris, 1883, xxxii, 656-058. Also Praticien, Paris, 188.3, vi, 599-602. 



Brewer, I. W. Tuberculosis among the Indians of Arizona and New Mexico. 



N. Y. Med. Jour., N. Y., Nov. 17, 1906. 



Tuberculosis among the school and resorvalioii Iiidians in this part of tlie United 



States. 



Brinton, D. G. Left-handedness in Norlli Aiucrican alxirigiiial art . Aincr. Anthroj)., 

 Wash., 189G, ix, 175-181. 

 Discussion as to the frequency of left-handedness among tlie Indians, based on the 

 evidence of their artifacts. 



Buchanan, C. M. Some medical customs, ideas, beliefs, and practices of the Snoko- 

 mish Indians of Puget sound. St. Louis Cour. Med., 1899, xxi, 277, 355. 

 Observations on foods, habits, medicine-men, notions of disease, treatment of dis- 

 ease, knowledge of anatomy and physiology, causation of disease, remedies, sweat baths 

 and cold baths, poisons, twin birth, ideas of sexual and generative functions, menstrua- 

 tion, gestation, retained placenta, chastity. Treats mainly of the beliefs and customs 

 of the people in the above particulars. 



Carr, L. The food of certain American Indians and their method of preparing it. 

 Proc. Amer. Antiq. Soc, Worcester, Mass., 1895; reprint, 1-38. 

 A general account, mainly of the eastern tribes. A large list of references to 

 earlier writers. 



Chamberlain, A. F. Maple sugar and the Indians. Aukt. Anthrop., Wash., 1891, 

 IV, 381-383. 

 Notes on the subject, with references to other writings. 

 Chamberlain, Lucia S. Plants used by the Indians of eastern North America (com- 

 piled by Russell). Amer. Naturalist, Boston, 1901, xxxv, 1-10. 

 Enumeration of the plants used, and their uses; list- of works fnmi which information 

 was obtained. 



Chastrey, H. L'hygi^ne et la medecinechez les IndiensCiuaraunos. .1. d'hygiene, 

 Paris, 1898, xxiii, 505-508. 

 The natives of the delta of the Orinoco: Hygiene, nursing, parturition, medicine- 

 men, remedies, surgery. 



L'hygiene et la medecine chez les Indiens Quiches (Ohaco, S. A.). La 



med. mod., Paris, 1898, ix, 215-216. 

 Hygiene, dwellings, parturition, food, diseases, medicine-men, remedies, snake- 

 bites, surgery. 



Chesnut, V. K. Plants used by the Indians of Mendocino county, California. 

 Cont. U. S. Nat. Herbar., Wash., 1900-1902, vii, 295-408. 

 Round Valley and Ukiah tribes: A valuable detailed account of the plants used, 

 particularly of those serving for food or drink. 



Cleaves, C. C. Parturition among the Eskimos. Indiana Med. Jour., Indianap- 

 olis, 1899-1900, XVIII, 296; also (the same) in the Pacific Med. Jour., San Fran., 

 Dec, 1899. 

 Northwestern Alaska: Description of an ordinary case of labor. 

 CoNYNGHAM, E. F. All Indian bath. Jour. Amer. Med. Assoc, Chicago, 1903, xli, 

 323. 

 Describes very briefly and pictures a sweat-bath hut among the Salish. 

 Cook, 0. F. Food plants of ancient America. Smithson. Rep. for 1903, 481-497, 

 Wash., 1904. 

 Notes on some of the more important native foods, with suggestions as to derivation. 



