INDEX 



Page 



Abrading processes of stone -shaping 344 



Abrading stones 192, 345, 346, 347 



Activities, classification of antiquities by . . . 150 



Adz, stone, of the northwest coast 29 



Afton, Okla., flint implements from Ill 



Agriculture of the Incas ' 137 



Alabaster tablet, showing use of drill 352 



Aleutl^n Islands, as a route of migration . . 34 



" Amazon axe " 23 



Ameghino, data collected by 58 



American Antiquarian Society, investiga- 

 tions of 15 



Analogies in culture, value of 21 



Anthropology— 



branches of 1 



definition of 1 



Antiquities — 



classification of 148 



rare in northern interior area 123 



ANTIQLnTT OF MAN— 



in California, evidence of '%! 



in Columbia Valley 118 



in Mississippi Valley area 105 



Antiquity of man in America 16, 19 



arguments against great 63 



arguments in favor of great 62 



geological evidence of 58 



problems of 54 



value of archeological material in deter- 

 mining 73 



Anvil stones 297, 300, 301, 303 



Apache method of implement making 295 



Arawak culture 142, 145 



Archeology— 



not limited to antiquity 5 



range of ." 6 



relations of, to history 2 



research in, scope of xv 



ultimate purpose of xvi 



Archeology of Western Hemisphere — 



sources of information 1,9 



sources of misinformation 10 



Architecture of the Inca period 138 



See Building; Dwellings. 



Argentina, explorations conducted by 16 



Argillite, significance of use of 77 



Arkansas quarries 196 



Arrowheads— 



cache of Ill 



method of making — 



by Den6 318 



by Eskimo 318 



by Hupa 320 



by Klamath 312 



by Pahvant 311 



by Paiute 310, 312, 313 



by Powhatan 316 



by Shasta 299 



by western tribes 322 



by Wintoon 314 



described by Gushing 366 



Asia — 



early intercourse between eastern and 



western 27 



origin of American race in 20 



Atlantis, myth of 14,33 



Atwater, Caleb, paper by 15 



Auriferous gravels of California, relics 



found in 61,116 



Australian method of chipping 324 



Ax, Chinese bronze 28 



Ax, stone — 



drilled 23 



fluted 109 



method of shaping 331, 333 



possible origin 24 



time required in making 2S1 



type of, in South America 105 



Axes, grooved stone 237, 334 



from supposed glacial deposits S3 



rare in Georgia-Florida area 103 



Aztec culture 126 



effect of environment on 48 



Aztec method of making knives 323 



Aztec probable workers of obsidian 



MINES 225 



Babbitt, F. E., discoveries of 85 



Baird, S. F., diseoveryof remains in Pennsyl- 

 vania cave by 92 



Balfour, Henry, on Australian method of 



chipping 324 



Banner stones 23,24 



Barnard, W. C, collections of 207 



Basketry of California area 116 



Beck-with, E. G., on the making of arrow- 

 heads 312 



Belcher, E., on Eskimo method of arrow- 

 making 321 



Bennett, Charles H., on pipestone quarr;-. 262 



Bering Strait as a route of migration 35 



Big Bone Cave, fossil found in 91 



Bingham, ITiram, Peruvian expedition of. . . 60 



Blade from Loveland,Ohio 82 



Blade from Newcomerstown, Ohio 80 



Blade making 161,165,179,191,290,291,293 



Blades, types of 182, 292 



Blake, W. P., on turquoise mines 271 



Boas, Franz, on Eskimo method of arrow- 

 making 320 



Boat-shaped stones from auriferous 



gravels 66 



Bolivia, ancient builders of 276 



Bone chipping implement 319 



Bone fragments resembling implements 92 



Bow drill 355 



Bowman, I., on age of Cuzco remains. 60 



Brazil— 



explorations conducted by 16 



researches in caves of 93 



Bridges of the Incas 139 



Brower, J. v., excavations made by 85 



373 



