276 



BUREAU OF AMERICAN ETHNOLOGY 



[Bull. 178 



Moiinds — Continued 



terminology, 37: If. 

 visited by Indians, 71: 128 

 See also Burial mounds; Cairns; 

 House mounds; Lodge sites; 

 Mounds; Mound Builders; Ref- 

 use mounds; Vault graves; Vil- 

 lage sites ; and specific names of 

 mounds and of different States. 

 "Mounds of the Mississippi Valley his- 

 toricallv considered," by Lucien Carr, 

 cited, 8: 9, 33 

 Mountain, son of Black Hawk, 86: 90 

 Mountain Branch, 78: 345 

 Mountain Cahuilla 



divisions of the, 78 : 577 

 mention of, 78 : 694 

 sweat houses not mentioned among, 

 78: 703 

 Mountain Cherokee, 22 : 80 

 Mountain cottonwood among the Tewa, 



55: 42 

 Mountain dwellers, Tlingit myths of, 



39: 222 fe., 280-288 

 Mountain-laurel, use of, 99: 203, 220 

 Mountain lion 



among the Tewa, 56: 30 

 See also Puma. 

 Mountain-mahogany, among the Tewa, 



55: 10,45, 72 

 Mountain of the I^nives, 60: 214 

 Mountain people, the cause of acci- 

 dents, 99: 18 

 Mountains 



naming of, 90: 25 f. 



offering to, 94: 232 f., 235 



of Gila-Salt region, description of, 



35: 7 f. 

 sacred, Kamia, 97: 2 

 Mountain sheep among the Tewa, 56: 



1, 3, 4, 14, 15 

 Mountain symbol, 81: 45 

 Mount Carmel, no ruins observed near, 



82: 52 f. 

 Mount Diablo, 78:472 

 Mount Diablo Range, 78: 462, 476 

 Mount Graham, caves in, 35: 37 

 Mount Graham Forest Reserve, loca- 

 tion of, 35: 7 

 Mount Lassen, volcanic peak of, 78: 



338 

 Mount Pitt, 78:285 

 Mount Pleasant, mounds near, 82: 20 

 Mount Pleasant School, Mich. (Chip- 

 pewa) 



epilepsy at, 34: 203, table 9 



(facing p. 406) 

 goiter at, 34: 199, table 9 

 pathological conditions at, 34: 



table 9 

 tuberculosis at, 34: 210, table 9 

 Mount San Antonio, 78: 615, 621 

 Mount San Gorgonio, 78: 615 



Mount San Jacinto 



Diegueno name for, 78: 711 

 mention of, 78: 616 

 Mount Shasta 



mention of, 78: 72, 284, 318 

 no Achomawi near, 78: 306 

 Mount Tecuya, 78: 552 

 Mount Thomas 



sand altar on, 35 : 59 

 shrines on, 35: 19 

 Mount Whitney, "where all rivers be- 

 gin," 78: 607 

 Mourners, hired, 83: 32, 33, 77 

 Mourning 



among the California Indians, 

 78: 28, 37, 46, 77, 156, 173, 214, 

 291, 295, 310, 333, 419, 446, 457, 

 470, 538 ff., 597, 721, 740, 846- 

 850 

 among the Fuegians, 63: 160 f. 

 anniversary, 78: 316, 360, 429- 

 432, 452, 457, 500, 573, 589, 603, 

 604, 609, 613, 626, 642, 672, 675, 

 690, 691, 707, 716, 750, 792, 859 

 ff. 

 duration of, 83: 51, 70, 82 

 period of, Choctaw, 48: 27 

 Mourning ceremonies 



feathers used in, 97: 49 

 observance of, 97: 58-61 

 songs of, 97: 63 

 Mourning cradle, description of, by Cat- 



lin, 83: 68 f. 

 Mourning customs 



in New England, 71: 16 



of the Assiniboin, 83: 44, 48, 49 



of the Blackfoot, 83: 10, 11, 12 



oftheBrul6, 83:36,38 



of the Cheyenne, 83 : 9 



of the Chippewa, 86:76ff. 



of the Choctaw, 71 : 100 



oftheCree, 83:6 



of the Creek, 73:373 



of the Crow, 83: 78 



of the Kamia, 97: 30, 37, 44, 56, 



58-61, 71 

 oftheKansa, 83:54 

 oftheKaruk, 94:81 

 of the Mandan, 83: 68, 70, 71, 72, 



77 

 of the Mdewakanton, 83: 22, 23 

 of the Natchez, 71 : 104 

 of the Ojibway, 83 : 4 

 of the Omaha, 83:51 

 of the Osage, 83 : 4, 56, 57, 58 

 of the Pawnee, 83: 80, 81, 82; 



93: 117 

 of the Quapaw, 83: 60 

 of the Sauk and Foxes, 83 : 14 

 of the Sisseton, 83:26 

 of the Wichita, 83:85 

 of the Yankton, 83:29 

 See also Death ; Mortuary customs ; 

 Self-mutilation ; Wailing. 

 Mourt, George, quoted on dwellings of 

 Cape Cod, 69: 22 



