Bonner jea] 



INDEX TO BULLETINS 1-100 



399 



Snake — Continued 



Cochiti tales of the girl who 



stepped on a, 98:126,127 

 dreams, formulas for, 99 : 167 

 Hitchiti story of the man who be- 

 came a, 88: 97 f. 

 Koasati story of the monster black, 



88: 189 

 man transformed into, Kathlamet 



tale, 26: 225-230 

 man transformed into, Kathlamet 



tale, abstract of, 26: 261 

 man who became a, Creek stories, 



88: 30 f., 31 f., 32 f., 33 f., 34 

 the racing. Creek story, 88: 29 f. 

 tie, the king of the. Creek story, 



88: 34 fE. 

 tooth, used in scratching operation, 

 99: 203 

 Suake, Great, story of, 97: 78 

 Snake, green 



capture of, for sacred pack, 85: 



79, 81 

 supernatural power of, 85: 65 

 See also Serpents. 

 Suake, horned, distribution of concept 



of, 95: 55 f. 

 Snakebites 



among the Cora, 34: 251 

 among the Hopi, 34: 241 

 among the Mescaleros, 34 : 237 

 among the Opata, 34: 250 

 among the Otomi, 34: 253 

 among the Papago, 34: 242 

 among the San Carlos Apache, 34 : 



234 

 among the Tarahumare, 34 : 251 

 Choctaw cure for, 48 : 23 

 formulas for, 99 : 167, 176, 240 

 summary as to, 34: 172 f. 

 See also Snakes. 

 Snake Clan 



a Chitimacha clan, 43: 349 

 no ceremonial subterranean rooms 

 of, 50: 25 

 Snake Dance, 51: 65 

 Snake doctor, Chitimacha, 43: 351 

 Snake fraternity, chief kiva at Walpi 



used by, 50 : 33 

 Snake game, Chippewa, description of, 



86: 116 

 Snake Gulch 



pictographs found in, 82: 141 

 probability of ruins in, 82 : 142 

 Snake Indians, tobacco of, 94 : 44 

 Snake kiva of Hopi, rectangular, 50: 



24 

 Snake people, ancient home of, 51: 65 

 Snakeroot, Black, use of, 99: 277 

 Virginia, use of, 99 : 177, 286 

 See also Eupatorium. 

 Snakes 



among the Tewa, 56: 10, 46, 50 

 as decoration on pottery, 81: 43, 



45, 50 

 attitude toward, 99: 185 

 belief concerning, 99 : 185 



S nakes — C on tin ued 

 eating of, 73: 358 

 Pecos Indians become, Cochiti tale, 



98: 16 

 people who went for turquoise and 

 became, Cochiti tale, 98 : 196 f . 

 reverence for, 99: 177 

 used as food, Maya, 64: 24 

 See also Serpents ; Snake. 

 Snake Society, Cochiti tale of the pun- 

 ishment of, 98:15f. 

 Snake Valley, report of ruins in, 82: 



60 f . 

 Snanaimuk language, works in, 16 : 65 

 Snapping turtle, ceremonial use of, 



72: 15,19,33 

 Snappy, aclmowledgment to, 94 : 2 

 Snares of the Fuegians, 63: 191 

 Snaring and trapping, California In- 

 dian, 78: 86. 213, 294, 309, 326, 

 528, 530, 615, 652, 817 

 Snauyaka, Southern Diegueno clan at, 



78: 719 

 Sneezeweed, yarrow, among the Tewa, 



55: 53 

 Sneezing among Indian adults, 34 : 155 

 Sniffen, M. K., cooperation of, 30, pt. 



1: ix 

 Snipe, not killed by the Biloxi, 22: 17 

 Snohomish language, works in, 16: 65 

 Snoring of Indian adults, 34: 155 

 Snow Canyon, 78: 618 

 Snow caused by children playing with 



excrements, 26: 216 f., 261 

 Snowshoes 



of the California Indians, 78: 76, 



295, 327, 405, 410, 807 

 varieties of, description of, 86: 



148 f . 

 with claws, mention of, 39 : 329 

 Snow shovel, wooden, Chippewa, 86: 



171 

 Snow Snake, game played with, 86: 



68 

 Snuff, peculiar use of, 91: 18 f. 

 Snyder, — , on burial mounds, 8: 20 

 Snyder, Dr. Alonzo D., on pathological 

 conditous at Colville Agency, Wash., 

 34: table 9 (facing p. 406) 

 Snyder, J. F., on the making of arrow- 

 heads, 60: 299, 313 

 Snyder Farm, niin on, 35: 55 

 Soapstone 



carvings in California area, 60: 



115 

 deposits of, 60 : 101 

 lamps made of, 60: 121 

 lamps of the Arctic region, 60: 



239 

 quarries, 60: 228, 229 

 quarries in California, 60: 238 

 quarries in Wyoming, 60: 238 

 use of, for pipes, 94: 153 ff. 

 vessels, 60: 232, 233 

 working, 60: 358 

 See also Steatite. 

 Soapweed, medicinal use of, 34: 74 



