56 



BUREAU OF AMERICAN ETHNOLOGY 



[Bull. 178 



Buttresslike projection, common at Tula 



and San Juan Teotihuacan, 74 : 21 

 Butts, E., locality of Lansing skeleton 



visited by, 33:47 

 Buzzard 



dead, used as a prophylactic, 99: 



76 

 Koasati story of rabbit and the, 



88:211 

 Papago story concerning, 90 : 33 

 why bald, 47 : 33-36 ; 90 : 33 

 "Buzzard picker," Chitimacha, 43: 350 

 Byington, Cyrus 



authority consulted on Avoyel, 43 : 



24 

 missionary among the Choctaw 



Indians, 46:vii 

 sketch of life of, 46 : vii ff. 

 Byington, E. S., acknowledgment to, 



46:isf. 

 Byington, Lillian, song taken down by, 



38:161 

 Bvrd, John T., mound group on farm of, 



23:30 

 Byrd, William 



account of adventures of, 22: 45, 



46 

 on Catawba population in 1728, 



22:73 

 on Catawba villages in 1728, 22 : 71 

 on flight of Occaneechi, 22 : 55 

 on incorporation of Sara and 



Keyauwee, 22 : 59 

 on Indian education, 22 : 44 

 on Iroquois-Siouan hostility, 22: 



13 

 on last of the Occaneechi, 22 : 55 

 on Monacan and Manahoac, 22 : 23 

 on southward movement of Sara 



andEno, 22:61 

 on supposed extinction of the Tu- 



telo, 22:50 

 on the early Saponi, 22 : 40, 49 

 on the last of the Eno, 22 : 64 

 on Tutelo and Saponi habitat, 22: 



38 

 Sara village described by, 22 : 58 

 "Steukenhocks" mentioned by, 22: 

 21 

 Byrd, Col. William, description by, of 



Nottoway town, 69 : 57 

 Byron, Ralph, excavation by, 35: 88 

 Byron Ranch, ruin on, 35 : 88 



Caacac, mention of, by Cabrillo, 78: 



553 

 Caacat, another name of Caacac, 78: 



553 

 Caaiiita, see Coweta. 

 Cabnn 



Maya day sign, 28 : 33, 50, 51, 52 

 mention of, 57: 37, 42. 53, 54, 55, 

 56, 94, 111, 148, 151, 1.52, 167, 196, 

 216, 217, 21 S, 219, 220, 221, 222, 

 228, 236, 238, 239, 240, 247, 256, 

 257, 258. 259, 263, 264, 265 



Cabbage, among the Tewa, 55: 11, 85, 



107, 112 

 Cabecar [or Cabecara ; Cabecares], 44: 



83, 89, 91 

 Cabeza de Vaca 



account by, of Narvaez expedition, 



73 : 144 fE. 

 Apalachee described by, 73 : 113 ff. 

 Cabezas, 44 : 37 

 Cabezon, in Cahuilla territory, 78: 



595, 694 

 Cabezon Creek, reference to, 78 : 618 

 Cabins, Cherokee, manner of building, 



99 : 292 

 Cabista, a Florida settlement, 73 : 333 

 Cabo, Romano, identitication of, 73: 51 

 Cabrillo, 78 : 275, 277, 546, 552 f . 

 Cacalotes, 44 : 30 

 Cacaopera, 44:76 

 Cacari(a), 44:24,27 

 Cacaspada, see Sacaspada. 

 Cacaumeat, a Vanyume place name, 



78:615 

 Cache Creek 



lake ending at, 78:224 

 magnesite found near, 78 : 249 

 mention of, 78: 272, 353, 355 

 Wintun at, 78: 357 

 Caches 



as burial places, 83 : 80 

 described by Fletcher and La 



Flesche, 77 : 80 

 described by Matthews, 77: 150 

 exposed by railroad cut, 77: 82 

 for storage of corn, 77: 126 

 of corn, 69:41,53 

 of stone implements, 60: 107 

 of stone implements at Aftou, 



Okla., 60: 111, 208 

 of stone implements in Delaware 



County, Okla., 60: 111, 208 

 of stone implements in Ohio mound, 



60: 227 

 Omaha, description of, by Gilden, 



77:83, 84 

 on elevated stage, 77: 12 

 Cachipile, a Timucua town, 73: 324 

 Cacique 



name applied to Timucua chiefs by 



Spaniards, 73: 14 

 ofiice of, among the Mayas, 28: 



630 

 rejiort of Chakchiuma rebellion, 



43: 293 

 who visited the dead, Cochiti tale, 

 98: 130 f. 

 Caco, reputed town of Liquimuymii, 



78: 554 

 Ca cores, identity of, with Shoccoree, 



22: 62 

 Cacoroy, a Timucua town, 73: 324 

 Cacougai, a synonym for Tuskegee, 



73: 208 

 Cactus 



ball, among the Tewa, 55: 62 

 barren, use of, 97:26 



