414 BUREAU OF AMERICAN ETHNOLOGY [bull. 34 



Description of remarkable results of fractun^ in the bones of the arm of a Ken- 

 tucky Indian. 



Physical and physiological observations on the Navaho. Ibid., 1900, n. s., 



II, 339-345. 

 Preliminary report. Puberty, marriage, pulse, resi^iration, temj^erature, diseases, 

 disposition, crime, head deformation. 



The Aztecs of yesterday and to-day. Harper's Mag., N. Y., Dec, 1902, 



37-12. 

 Notes on dwellings, dress, habits. 



The "Chichimecs" and their ancient culture, with notes on the Tepecanos 



and the ruins of La Quemada, Mexico. Amer. Anthrop., Wash., 1903, n. s. 

 385-440. Portion relating to Tepecano translated by Fehlinger in Globus, Bruns- 

 wick, 1904, Lxxxv. 292-293. 

 Tepecano (Jalisco): Dwellings, clothing, occupation, food, social customs, crime, 

 intellectual qualities, medicine, parturition, attentions to children. 



Notes on the Indians of Sonora, Mexico. Amer. Anthrop., Wash., 1904, n. s., 



VI, 51-89. 



Mayo, Yaqui, but principally Opata: Dwellings, dress, occupation, food, drinks, 

 crime, marriage, fecundity, parturition, puerperium, medicine, medicine-women, 

 remedies, diseases. 



Notes on the .San Carlos Apache. Ibid., 1905, n. s., vii, 480-495. 



Dwellings, head deformation, habits. 



Diseases of the Indians, more especially of the southwest United States and 



northern Mexico. Wash. Med. Annals, iv, no. 6, 1905, 372-394. With discussion 



on diseases, treatment, and remedies by Dr. D. S. Lamb, Dr. G. M. Kober, Gen. 



Forwood, and Dr. E. L. Morgan. 

 Hkdlicka, Ales, and Carl Lumholtz. Trephining in Mexico. Amer. Anthrop., 



Wash., 1897, x, 389-396. 

 Description and illustration of two Tarahumare trephined skulls, collected by 

 Lumholtz, with details of the find by Lumholtz. 

 Hunter, J. D. Observations on the diseases incident to certain of the North American 



Indian tribes. N. Y. Med. and Phys. Jour., N. Y., 1822, i, 174-179. 

 Remarks on the diseases of the females of several Indian tribes west of the 



Mississippi. Ibid., 304-315. 



Remarks on several diseases prevalent among the western Indians, with some 



account of their remedies and modes of treatment. Amer. Med. Recorder, Phila. 

 1822, V, 408-417. 



I. Plains Indians. A letter containing notes on their diseases and treatment, with 

 names of remedies. 



II. A letter containing observations on menstruation, gestation, parturition, 

 deformed infants, attentions to the new-born, nursing, diseases, worms. 



III. A letter giving observations on several diseases and remedies. 

 Valuable communications, republished in substance in the following: 



Memoirs of a captivity among the Indians of North America. 3d ed., 



Lond., 1824. 



Treats of plains tribes (particularly Kickapoo, Kansas, and Osage). 



The most valuable account on matters of medical interest among these peoples. 



Habitations, habits, food, clothing, occupations, physical and moral condition, 

 medicine-men, marriage, birth, nursing, crimes and punishment, diseases, treatment 

 of the sick, medicines, surgery. 



