Bonnerjea] 



INDEX TO BULLETINS 1-100 



127 



Durfi.n, Father, — , — Continued 

 oncipactli, 28:39 

 on last five days of Mexican year, 



28:17 

 tribes encountered by, 78 : 445 

 Durliam Cave, exploration of, by Mer- 

 cer, 60:92 

 Diising, — , on European births by sexes, 



34: 39 

 Dust, ruins filled with windblown, 54 : 



33 

 Dutchmanspipe, medicinal use of, 99: 

 288 



See also Aristolochia. 

 Dutisme, — , reference by, to village of 



Missouri, 37 : 91 f . 

 Duval, William P., on the Mikasuki, 



73:402 

 Duval County, Fla., mounds in, 71: 



118 

 Dwamish language, works in, 16: 16 

 Dwarf iris, use of, 99: 288 

 Dwellings 



adobe, at Paragonah, 82 : 55-58 

 arranged to form open square, 



82:46 

 bark-covered, 69 : 23, 24, 58, 99 

 built on mounds, 4 : 12 

 care of, 34 : 32, 34 

 communal, 60: 102 

 construction and repair of, 34: 



18; 82: 27, 31 

 description of, 42: 29 f., 97: 



18 ff. 

 dismantled, 92 : 16, 24, 44 

 early forms of, 92 : 3, 4 

 erected over pits, 96 : 22 

 evolved from storage bins, 100: 3 

 excavation of, 92 : 10-61 

 gap in development of, 100 : 113 

 general description of, 34: 15 ff. 

 hiatus between types of, 100: 174 

 hundred-roomed, 100 : 4 

 improvement in, 100 : 3 

 in groups, 96 : 21 

 Karuk, 94:4 

 location of, 97:20 

 material used in construction of, 



60:99 

 of Arctic area, 60 : 121 

 of California area, 60 : 116 

 of Indians and moundbuilders, sim- 

 ilar, 8:15 

 of jacal type construction, 96: 19, 



20 

 of Lower Mississippi Valley region, 



60:106 

 of North Atlantic area, 60 : 99 

 of Northern Utes, 75:25 

 of Plains tribes, 60:110 

 oftheBiloxi, 22:17 

 of the Chippewa, 86: 22-28 

 oftheHupa, 42:16,21 

 of the Menominee, 42: 9, 21 

 of the Mohave, 42 : 18, 21 

 of the Oglala Sioux, 42 : 11 f ., 21 



Dwellings — Continued 



ofthePapago, 90:1,2 

 of the Quinaielt, 42: 14, 21 

 order of development of, 100: 109 

 Pueblo, development of, 96: 5 

 sequence of types of, 100: 89 f. 

 subterranean, examples of, 100: 



109 f. 

 superposition of, 82 : 24 ; 92 : 71 

 tentative restoration of, 82: 8 

 three-roomed, description of, 96: 



34 

 type of, determined by material 



available, 69:23 

 See also Adobe ; Caves ; ClifE dwell- 

 ings ; Communal house ; Earth 

 lodge; Habitations; House re- 

 mains ; Houses ; Jacal struc- 

 tures; Lodges; Pit dwellings; 

 Pueblo ruins ; Structures ; Tipi ; 

 Wigwam. 

 Dwight, Th., publication by, cited, 52 : 



236 

 Dyar, L.S., 94:127 

 Dye, genipa, see Genipa. 

 Dyeing 



means of, 7 : 17 

 of head trophy, 79:31 

 Dyes 



Chitimacha, 43:348 

 Choctaw, 48:14 

 Natchez, 43:66 

 of brilliant colors, 7 : 7 

 use of, by Chippewa, 86 : 163 

 See also Colors; Paints. 

 Dynamometers, 34: 108, 109, 143 

 Dysentery 



by tribes, 34 : 

 Huichol, 186 

 Pima, 182, 183 

 Tepecano, 186 

 formula for treatment of, 99: 244 

 summary of, 34: 188, 191 

 See also Diarrhea. 

 Dysmenorrhea, prevalence of, among 



Southwestern tribes, 34: 189 

 Dyspepsia, Chitimacha remedies for, 



43:351 

 Dystocia 



among Southwestern tribes, 34: 



55 

 See also Childbirth. 

 Dysuria, Papago remedy for, 34: 242 



Eagle, Mrs. Holding, songs recorded by, 



61: 60 

 Eagle 



Alabama story of the nest of, 88: 



154 

 and the baby, Cochiti tale, 98: 



117 f. 

 Black, song of, 80 : 71 

 he who gathered food for an, Haida 



myth, 29:356f. 

 Koasati story of the man and the, 

 88:193 



