174 



BUREAU OF AMERICAN ETHNOLOGY 



[b. a. e. 



Vol. I, 1877: 

 Part I. — Tribes of the extreme Northwest, by 

 W. H. Dall. 

 On the distribution and nomenclature of 

 the native tribes of Alaska and the adja- 

 cent territory. 

 On succession in the shell-heaps of the 



Aleutian islands. 

 On the origin of the Innuit. 

 Appendix to part i. Linguistics. 

 Notes on the natives of Alaska, by J. Furu- 



helm. 

 Terms of relationship used by the Innuit: a 

 series obtained from natives of Cumber- 

 land inlet, by W. H. Dall. 

 Vocabularies, by George Gibbs and W. H. 



Dall. 

 Note on the use of numerals among the 

 T'sim si-an', by George Gibbs. 

 Part II. Tribes of western Washington and 

 northwestern Oregon, by George Gibbs. 

 Appendix to part ii. Linguistics. 

 Vocabularies, by George Gibbs, VVm. F. 



Tolmie, and g' Mengarini. 

 Dictionary of the Niskwalli, by George 

 Gibbs. 

 Vol. II, 1890: 

 The Klamath Indians of southwestern Oregon, 

 by Albert Samuel Gatschet. Two parts. 

 Vol. Ill, 1877: 

 Tribes of California, by Stephen Powers. 

 Appendix. Linguistics, edited by J. \V. 

 Powell. 

 Vol. IV, 1881: 

 Houses and house-life of the American aborig- 

 ines, by Lewis H. Morgan. 

 Vol. v,1882: 

 Observations on cup-shaped and other lapida- 

 rian sculptures in the Old World and in 

 America, by Charles Rau. 

 On prehistoric trephining and cranial amulets, 



by Robert Fletcher. 

 A s'tudy of the manuscript Troano, by Cyrus 

 Thomas, with an introduction by D. G. 

 Brinton. 

 Vol. VI, 1890: 



The (pegiha language, by J. Owen Dorsey. 

 Vol. VII, 1890: 

 A Dakota-English dictionary, by Stephen R. 

 Riggs, edited by J.Owen Dorsey. 

 Vol. viii: 



[Not issued]. 

 Vol. IX. 1893: 

 Dakota grammar, texts, and ethnography, by 

 Stephen R. Riggs, edited by J. Owen Dorsey. 

 Annual Reports of the Bureau of (Ameri- 

 can) Ethnology to the Secretary of the 

 Smithsonian Institution. 23 vols. roy. 8°. 

 First Report (1879-80) , 1881. 

 Report of the Director. 



On the evolution of language, as exhibited 

 in the specialization of the grammatic proces.ses; 

 the differentiation of the parts of speech, and 

 the integration of the sentence; from a study of 

 Indian languages, by J. W. Powell. 



Sketch of the mythology of the North American 

 Indians, by J. W. Powell. 



Wyandot government: A short study of tribal 

 society, by J. W^ Powell. 



On limitations to the use of some anthropologic 

 data, by J. W. Powell. 



A further contribution to the study of the mor- 

 tuary customs of the North American Indians, by 

 H. C. Yarrow. 



Studies in Central American picture-writing, 

 by Edward S. Holden. 



Cessions of land by Indian tribes to the United 

 States: Illustrated by those in the State of In- 

 diana, by C. C. Royce. 



Sign language among North American Indians, 

 compared with that among other peoples and 

 deaf-mutes, by Garrick Mallery. 



Catalogue of linguistic manuscripts in the 

 library of the Bureau of Ethnology, by J. C. 

 Pilling. 



Illustration of the method of recording Indian 

 languages. From the manuscripts of J. Owen 

 Dorsey, A. S. Gatschet, and S. R. Riggs. 



Second Report (1880-81), 1883. 



Report of the Director. 



Zuni fetiches, by F. H. Gushing. 



Myths of the Iroquois, by Erminnie A. Smith. 



Animal carvings from mounds of the Mississippi 

 valley, by II. W. Henshaw. 



Navajo silversmiths, by Washington Matthews. 



Art in shell of the ancient Americans, by W. 

 H. Holmes. 



Illustrated catalogueof the collections obtained 

 from the Indians of New Mexico and Arizona in 

 1879, by James Stevenson. 



Illustrated catalogue of the collections obtained 

 from till' Indians of New Mexico in 1880, by James 

 Stevenson. 



Third Report (1881-82), 1884. 



Report of the Director (including On aetivital 

 similarities). 



Notes on certain Maya and Mexican manu- 

 scripts, by Cyrus Thomas. 



On masks, labrets, and certain aboriginal cus- 

 toms, by W. H. Dall. 



Omalia sociology, by J. Owen Dorsey. 



Navajo weavers, by Washington Matthews. 



Prehistoric textile fabrics of the United States, 

 derived from impressions on pottery, by W. H. 

 Holmes. 



Illustrated catalogue of a portion of the collec- 

 tions made by the Bureau of Ethnology during 

 the field season of 1881, by W. H. Holmes. 



Illustrated catalogue of the collections obtained 

 from the pueblos of Zuni, N. Mex., and Wolpi, 

 Ariz., in 1881, by James Stevenson. 



Fourth Report (1882-83), 1886. 



Report of the Director. 



Pictographs of the North American Indians. 

 A preliminary paper, by Garrick Mallery. 



Pottery of the ancient Pueblos, by W. H. 

 Holmes. 



Ancient pottery of the Mississippi vallev, bv 

 W. H. Holmes. 



Origin and development of form and ornament 

 in ceramic art, by W. II. Holmes. 



A study of Pueblo pottery as illustrative of Zufii 

 culture growth, bv F. H. Cushing. 



Fifth Report ( 1883-84) , 1887. 



Report of the Director. 



Burial mounds of the nortliern sections of the 

 United States, by Cyrus Thomas. 



The ('herokee Nation of Indians: A narrative 

 of their otlicial relations with the Colonial and 

 Federal Governments, by C. C. Royce. 



The mountain chant: A Navajo ceremony, by 

 Washington Matthews. 



The Seminole Indians of Florida, by Clay 

 MacCauley. 



The religious life of the Zuiii child, by Matilda 

 C. Stevenson. 



Sixth Report (1884-85), 1888. 



Report of the Director. 



Ancient art of the province of Chiriqui, Colom- 

 bia, by W. H. Holmes. 



A study of the textile art in its relation to the 

 development of form and ornament, by W. H. 

 Holmes. 



Aids to the study of the Maya codices, by Cyrus 

 Thomas. 



Osage traditions, by J. Owen Dorsey. 



The<(iitral Eskimo, by Franz Boas. 



Seventh Report (188.'i-86), 1891. 



Report of the Director. 



Indian linguistic families of America north of 

 Mexico, by J. W. Powell. 



The Mide'wiwin or "grand medicine society " 

 of the Ojibwa, by W. J. Hoffman. 



The sacred formulas of the Cherokees, by James 

 Moonev. 



Eighth Report (1886-87), 1891. 



Report of the Director. 



A study of Pueblo architecture: Tusayan and 

 Cibola, bv Victor Mindeleff. 



Ceremonial of Hasjelti Dailjis and mythical 

 sand painting of the Navajo Indians, by James 

 StevoHsoii, 



Ninth Report (1887-88) 1892. 



Report of tlie Director. 



Ethnological results of the Point Barrow expe- 

 dition, by John Murdoch. 



