HRDLKKA] PHYSIOLOGICAL AND MEDICAL OBSERVATIONS 417 



Medicine, medicine-men,. remedies, anatomical knowledge, notions of diseases, 

 diseases, treatment, hygiene, parturition, attentions to the new-born. 

 Lloyd, F. Special report on Indians at San Carlos agency, Arizona. (No place), 1883. 



Includes remarks on prevalent diseases ("consumption almost unknown") and on 

 the medicine-men and their mode of treatment. Reports the shooting of a witch. 

 LuMHOLTZ, Carl. Unknown Mexico. Two volumes, N. Y., 1902. 



Principally the Tarahumare and the-Huichol. Includes observations on dwellings, 

 dress, food, drinks, habits, sports, marriage, (•hil(l))irth, childhood, medicine-men 

 and their practices. 



MacCauley, C. The Seminole Indians of Florida. 5th Rej). R. .V. E., 1883-4, 

 469-531, Wash., 1887. 

 Includes notes on mental traits, mamage, parturition, infancy, childhood, dwell- 

 ings, clothing, food, habits. 



M'Clellan, E. Obstetric procedures among certain of the aborigines of North Amer- 

 ica. Trans. Kentucky St. Med. Soc, Louisville, 1873, 88-100; also Richmond 

 and Louisville Med. Jour., Louisville, 1873, xvi, 580-592. 

 Pueblos, Apache, Navaho, Ute: Scanty notes on menstruation and labor. Of but 

 little value. 



McClenachan, H. M. The practice of medicine among the Indians. Med. and Surg. 

 Reporter, Phila., 1881, xliv, 338-341. 

 Grosventres and Assiniboin: Views of disease, medicine-men, treatment, sweat 

 baths. 



McGee, W J. The Seri Indians. 17th Rep. B. A. E., 1895-6, 1-344, Wash., 1898. 



Dwellings, clothing, food, occupations, marriage. 

 Mason, 0. T. The Chaclacayo trephined skull. Proc. U. S. Nat. Mus., viii, 410-412, 

 1885, Wash., 1886. 



Description of a trephined skull of a Peruvian Indian. 



The Ray collection from the Hupa reservation. Smithson. Rep. for 1886, 



205-239, Wash., 1889. 



Includes notes on dwellings, dress, food, tobacco, and medicine. Gives a list of 

 food-plants and remedies. 



Mathews, T. W. Notes on diseases among the Indians frequenting York factory, 

 Hudsons bay. Canada Med. and Surg. Jour., Montreal, 1884-5, xiii, 449-466. 

 Observations on diseases, particularly as to their frequency. 

 Matthews, Washington. Ethnography and philology of the Hidatsa Indians. 

 Washington, 1877. 

 Includes brief observations on dwellings, food, habits, marriage. Touches only 

 indirectly on matters of medical interest. 



The mountain chant, a Navajo ceremony. 5th Rep. B. A. E., 1883-4, 379-467, 



Wash., 1887. 



Detailed description of one of the ceremonies practised liy Navaho medicine-men 

 for the cure of disease. 



Navajo names for plants. Amer. Naturalist, Phila., 1886, xx, 767-777. 



A list of plants with brief indications of their uses; but little on medicines. 



Consumption among the Indians. Trans. Amer. Climat. Assoc, Phila., 1886, 



234-241. Further contribution to the study of consumption among the Indians. 



Ibid., 1888, 136-155. 

 Increasing prevalence of the disease, causes, statistics, discussion. 

 The night chant, a Navaho ceremony. Mem. Amer. Mus. Nat. Hist., N. Y.. 



1902, VI, 1-332. 



3452— Bull. 34—08 27 



