Bonnerjea] 



INDEX TO BULLETINS 1-100 



313 



Pammikey Indians— Continued 



defeat of, by Clierokee, 22: 28 

 gaudy colors used by, 17: 12 

 government of tbe, 17: 15 f. 

 home of, in 1894, 17:10 

 houses of the, 17: 12 

 individual ownership of land un- 

 known among, 17 : 17 

 intermixture of White and Negro 



blood with, 17:10 

 language of, vocabulary of seven- 

 teen words, 17: 12 

 mentality higher than the Virginia 



Negro, 17: 11 

 moral characteristics of, 17: 12 

 not allowed to marry persons of 



African descent, 17: 10 

 occupations of, hunting and fishing, 



17: 14 f. 

 original seat of, 17: 9 

 physical characteristics of, 17: 11 

 pottery of, 17: IS 

 pottery of, clay used in, 17 : 18 

 racial pride of, 17:10 

 the largest tribe of Powhatan, 17 : 



9 

 the only Virginia tribe to survive 

 the encroachment of civilization, 

 17: 9 

 total population of, in 1894, 17 : 10 

 tradition concerning, 17: 12 

 Pamunkey language 

 works in, 13: 386 

 See also Pamunkey Indian (lan- 

 guage of). 

 Pamunkey Reservation, belongs to the 



tribe as a whole, 17 : 17 

 Pamunkey River, Va., name obtained 



from Pamunkey Indians, 17 : 6 

 Pamunki, see Pamunkey. 

 Pan 



Hidatsa singer, 80: 2 

 melody played by, 80 : 10 

 songs recorded by, 80 : 117-120 

 wand made by, 80 : 115 

 Panakare, a Luisefio place name, 78: 



648 

 Panamenik 



a Karok settlement, 78: 99, 116 

 Deerskin dance of, 78 : 103 

 district, population of, 78 : 101 

 New Year ceremony at, 78 : 102 

 rites at, 78 : 104 

 Panamenits, a Karok village, 78: 70 

 Panamint 



a source of California place name, 



78: 896 

 divisions of, 78 : 577 

 general account of, 78 : 589-592 

 Panamint Mountains, 78 : 590, 602 

 Panamint Valley 78 : .590 

 Panana ( Pawnee ) , 44 : 25, 30 

 Panara, a Timucua town, 73 : 327 

 Panax trifoUum 



collected and dried, 99 : 91 

 use of, 99: 171, 202, 230, 289 



Pancake Place, village site on, 23: 65, 



66 

 Pa"ca-okla, Choctaw name for Pensa- 



cola, 43 : 32 

 I'auchaculas, see Pensacola. 

 Panchito (Araucanian cacique), 52: 



330 

 Panco, Jose 



a singer, 90 : xix 

 characterization of, 90: xx 

 patients treated by, 90 : 91 f . 

 Pancocolas, see Pensacola. 

 Panel designs 



bisecting, 96: 114-119 

 elaboration of, 96 : 116 ff. 

 paraUel, 96: 127 

 variation of, 96:127f. 

 zigzag element in, 96 : 113 f . 

 Pangasema-nu, a Central Miwok place 



name, 78 : 445 

 Paugong Lake, waters of, receded 



within historic times, 54: 44 

 Panguayes, 44 : 45 

 Panguitch Agency, Utah, mortality at, 



from tuberculosis, 42 : 5 

 Panic grass, among the Tewa, 55: 64 

 Panicum harbipulvinatum, among the 

 Tewa, 55: 64 

 See also Millet. 

 Pannier, see Knapsack. 

 Pan-pakan, a Southern Maidu place 



name, 78 : 394 

 Panquetzaliztli, festival, of Mexican 



war god Uitzilopochtli, 28: 131 

 Panquip, lance points and pottery 



from, in Royal Museum, 28: 107 

 Panquitch, probable occupancy of 



vicinity of, 82: 53 

 Pant, Jim, a singer, 75 : 17, 18, 19 

 Pantasmas, 44 : 79 

 Pantepec, 44 : 49 

 Panther 



and lynx, Kathlamet myth, 26: 



90-97 

 and lynx, Kathlamet myth, ab- 

 stract of, 26 : 255 

 and opossum in partnership, Koa- 



sati story, 88: 200 

 and owl, Kathlamet myth, 26 : 129- 



141 

 and owl, Kathlamet myth, abstract 



of, 26 : 257 f . 

 and rattlesnake, 88 : 201 

 and skunk, Kutenai tale, 59 : 23 ff ., 



40 

 Chitimacha story of, 43: 354 

 claws, occurrence of, with human 



remains, 23 : 39, 40 

 coyote pretends to be, Kutenai tale, 



59:168-171 

 crane and the, Natchez story, 88: 



248 f. 

 myth of the, Chinook, 20 : 191-195 

 See also Hunter ; Panthers ; Water 

 panther. 

 Panther, child, Natchez story of the, 

 88:234-239 



