INDEX. 



379 



Ruins— Page 



of arid region Ill 



of Maya cities 129 



Sailing craft unkno'wt^ in pre-Columbian 



America 20 



Samoa, antiquities of xvii 



Samoan club 29 



San Juan Teotihuacan, ruins of 126 



Santa Catalina soapstone quarries 238, 239 



Saville, M. H., researches of, in Guatemala. 227 



Sawing 344 



Sawing implements 348 



Schumacher, Paul— 



on Klamath arrow making 311 



on stone fracture 364 



Scouring 344 



Scrapers, stone, use of 316 



Scraping 344 



Sculpture— 



in California area 117 



in Central American-Isthmian area 132 



in eastern Mexico 127 



in Maya-Quich^ area 130 



in Northwest Coast area 119 



of the Maya 1 30 



Sculptures— 



Central American 26 



destruction of 11 



Sellers, G. E., on arrow making by western 



tribes 316, 322 



Seminole IN Florida to-day 102 



Seri Indun method of making arrow- 

 heads 36.5 



Serpentine, bowls and cups of 115 



Shaler, N. S.— 



on influence of buffalo on culture in Mis- 

 sissippi Valley 48 



on Ohio Valley cave explorations 89 



Shasta method of making arrowheads. . . 299 

 Sheep unknown in pre-Cclumbian Amer- 

 ica 20 



Shell heaps— 



of the G eorgia-Florida area 1 02 



of the Pacific coast 141 



Shell ornaments OF California area 115 



Ships, giant, of the Mediterranean 27 



Silliman, Benjamin, on mining implements. 272 



Silver ornaments FourND IN Florida 104 



Sink Hole mines 246, 248 



Sioux Indians — 



as quarry workers 258, 262 



owners of pipestone quarry 262, 263 



Slate— 



carvings of Northwest Coast area 119 



use of, in Arctic area 121 



Sledges, stone 261, 267, 272, 273 



Smith, C. T>., on mica mines of North Caro- 

 lina 250 



Smith, John, on Powhatan method of mak- 

 ing arrowheads 316 



Snyder, J. F., on the making of arrowheads 299,313 

 Soapstone— 



carvings in California area 115 



deposits of 101 



lamps made of 121 



lamps of the Arctic region 239 



quarries 228, 229 



Soapstone— Continued . 



quarries in California 238 



quarries in Wyoming 238 



vessels 232, 233 



working 358 



Spanish diggings 198,201,209,210 



Spearheads- 



Australian method of shaping 325 



of slate 24 



Spruce-pine mines 245 



Squier, E. G.— , 



expedition of 16 



on fortress of Olantaytambo 340 



on quarries of Cuzco 276 



on stonework at Cuzco 341 



Squier and Davis, researches of 15 



Statuette from Vera Cruz, earliest date 



recorded on 51 



Statuette. See Nampa Image. 



Steatite, pipes made of ii5 



Sec Soapstone. 



Stel.e — 



of Copan and Quirigiia 282 



of Guatemala suggest sculptures of Far 



East 28 



Stephens, John L.— 



expedition of 16 



on quarries at Copan 274 



Stone, use of, in building 99 



Stone Age, scope of xv 



Stone-building art of arid region 114 



Stone buildings not an evidence of great 



ANTIQUriTY 57 



Stone shaping— 



by fracture _. 283 



processes, classification of 278 



work in Potomac Valley 289 



Strap drill 354 



Terra-cotta FIGURINE from Nampa, Idaho. 69,70 



Teshoas 302 



Textiles of arid region 114 



TOLTEC remains 126 



Tombs of stone 139 



Tools. See Implements. 



Torquemada on Aztec method of making 



KNIVES 324 



Toy chariot from Mexico 20, 21 



Transportation 153 



of stone blocks 277 



Travertine vase, showing use of drill 351 



Trenton, N. J., archeological work in vicin- 

 ity of 76 



Trill, Charles F., work of xiv 



Turner mounds, mica figures from 242 



Turquoise, use of 273 



Turquoise mines 114 



Turquoise mlning 271 



Turtlebacks 289 



U. S. National Museum— 



collection of implements by 75 



work conducted by, nearCumberland, Md. 91 



Utensils, stone, of California area 115 



Viard method of arrow making 321 



Village site, sand-buried, on Chesapeake 



Bay 74 



