BUSHNELL] VILLAGES WEST OF THE MISSISSIPPI 201 
PLATE 39 
From the engraving of Bodmer’s painting used by Maximilian. (See note, 
pl. 15.) 
PLatTE 40 
Reproduced from the engraving of Bodmer’s painting as used by Maximilian. 
(See note, pl. 15.) 
PLATE 41 
Two wooden bowls and a pottery vessel collected among the Mandan. Speci- 
mens in the Unitéd States National Museum. 
: PLATE 42 
Examples of spoons, one made of a buffalo horn, the other formed from a 
horn of a mountain sheep, now in the United States National Museum. 
PLATE 43 
Reproduction of the original painting by Catlin, now in the United States 
National Museum, Washington. It is No. 383 in Catlin’s Catalogue, described 
as “ Minatarree Village, earth-covered lodges, on Knife River, 1,810 miles above 
St. Louis.” . 
George Catlin. (See note, pl. 23, a.) 
PLATE 44 
a. Original pencil sketch by Bodmer of the finished picture shown in }b. The 
sketch is now in the Edward HE. Ayer collection, Newberry Library, Chicago. 
b. Reproduction of a photograph of the engraving as used by Maximilian. 
PLATE 45 
After original sketches by Friedrich Kurz. (See note, pl. 23, b.) 
PLATE 46 
a. Reproduction of the original painting by Catlin, now in the United States 
National Museum, Washington. It is mentioned as No. 491 in Catlin’s Catalogue - 
and described as a “Crow Lodge, of twenty-five buffalo-skins.” A drawing 
made from the painting appeared as plate 20 in Vol. I of Catlin’s work. 
b. From the original negative by Jackson now in the Bureau of American 
Ethnology. 
PLATE 47 
A rather crude woodcut, made from this photograph, was used in Dunraven’s 
book, The Great Divide. Unfortunately it is not known when or by whom this 
most interesting negative was made, but it was probably the work of J. D. 
Hutton, a member of the Raynolds party during the exploration of the Yellow- 
stone Valley, 1859-1860. Although the Raynolds journal is in the War Depart- 
ment in Washington, there is no record or list of the photographs, many of 
which are known to have been made during the journey. A number of Hutton’s 
photographs were reproduced by Hayden in his work Contributions to the 
Ethnography and Philology of the Indian Tribes of the Missouri Valley. Phila- 
delphia, 1862. 
