Bonner jea] 



INDEX TO BULLETINS 1-100 



103 



Creek Indian — Continued 



attack of, on Yamasee, 73: 102 

 "black drink" of, note, 43 : 351 

 burial customs of, 71 : 110 ff. 

 burial under dwellings by, 8: 21 

 ceremonial runners among the, 85 : 



2 

 comparison of, with Natchez tribe, 



43: 2 

 conference of, with Gov. Oglethorpe, 



73: 15 

 distinction between Seminole and, 



73: 404 

 divisions of the, 73 : 216 

 early additions from Natchez, 43: 



253 

 incorporation of Natchez with the, 



22: S3 

 jealous of Yamasee, 73 : 101 

 joint Yamasee in war on colonists, 



73: 98 

 land claimed by the, 73 : 16 

 list of towns of, 43 : 253 

 location of, 43: 8 

 manuscript history of the, 43 : 254 

 migration legend of, 73: 192 

 movement of, into Florida Penin- 

 sula, 73: 106 

 origin of the name, 73 : 521 

 population of, 73: 437 fC., 442-448 

 pulse of the, 34: 141 

 respiration of the, 34 : 142 

 territory ceded by the, 73 : 16 

 tribes known as, 73 : 404 

 Upper and Lower, location of, 73 : 



215 f. 

 villages of, burned by the Span- 

 iards, 73: 221 

 war of, in Alabama, 73 : 199 

 war of, with Chickasaw, 73: 420 

 with English, invade Apalachia, 



73: 121 f£. 

 Yamasee harassed by, 73 : 106 

 Yamasee joined by, in war on colo- 

 nists, 73: 101 

 See also Muscogee Creeks. 

 Creek language, works in, 9: 27 f. 

 Creek music, work on, 53: 9 

 Creek Sam, account of, 43: 256 

 Creek towns, principal structures of, 



69: 74, 75, 76 

 Cree language, works in, 13: 96 ff. 

 Creighton Island, Ga., Indian burial at, 



71: 114 

 Cremation 



among the Chitimacha, 43: 350 

 among the Fuegians, 63: 161 

 common among Colorado River In- 

 dians, 51: 38 f. 

 east of the Mississippi, 71 : 36, 58 

 evidences of, 37: 8, 36, 88, 39, 40, 



41, 42, 64, 68 

 in Blue River region, 35: 44 

 in Thomas-Carlos region, 35 : 39 f. 

 practice of, by Kamia, 97 : 56 



Cremation — Continued 



practice of, by sedentary tribes, 



51: 40 

 reasons for, 71: 57, 147 

 Crematories of Mesa Verde National 



Park, 51: 38 ff. 

 Creoles, dugouts made by, 48: 18 

 Creosotebush among the Tewa, 55: 40 



See also Covillea; Larrca. 

 Cresap farm, occurrence of cairns on, 



23: 64 

 Crescent, common exterior design on 

 Santiago Ahuitzotla pottery, 74: 52 

 Crescent City 



village, feud between villages on 



Earl Lake and, 78 : 126 

 Yurok settlements near, 78: 124, 

 125 

 Crescentia cujete, see Calabash. 

 Crescent quarries, 60: 195 

 Cresnay, Baron de, in Natchez war, 43 : 



241, 244, 250 

 Cress, among the Tewa, 55: 11 

 Cresson, H. T., cited, 57: 27 

 Cretaceous rocks, near Marsh Pass, 50 : 



10 

 Cretinism 



physician's report on, 34: 213, 



table 9 (facing p. 406) 

 summary of, 34 : 190, 201 

 Cricket as a medicine, Papago, 34 : 242 

 Crime 



among Indians, account of, 34: 



166-171 

 and punishment, Choctaw, 48 : 25 f . 

 See also Suicide. 

 Cringan, A. T., on rate of movement in 

 melody and accompaniment, 53: 206 

 Cristone ruin, account of, 32 : 40-44 

 Crittenden County, Ark., mound exca- 

 vations in, 76 : 169 

 Crocodile Spring, cave dwellings near, 



82:49 

 Croghan, Col. George 



cited as an authority, 61 : 2 f . 

 on Saponi population in 1765, 22: 

 51 

 Cro-Magnon skeletal remains, 52: 4, 



239 

 "Cr6nica Mexicana" of Tezozomoc, ad- 

 monitions regarding the stars to Mo- 

 tecuhzoma Xocoyotzin in, 28: 355 

 Crook, General — , chairman of Ponka 



commission, 11: 86 

 Crook, Maj. George, member of bound- 

 ary commission, 61 : 4 

 Crooked Foot 



demonstration of power and sacred 



stone by, 61 : 229 f . 

 song by, 61 : 230 

 Crooked Mountains, naming of, 90 : 26 

 Crooks, examples of, 65 : 121 

 Crosby, Jacob H., ruins on farm of, 82 : 



47 

 Cross, Whitman, on tierra coeida, 52: 

 47 



