iz 
MICHELSON. ] INTRODUCTION. 33 
contiguous. That the reader may properly understand this point I 
give here a few (not exhaustive) references. 
For the general subject: 
BusHNELL, Davin I., Jr. Native cemeteries and forms of burial east of the 
Mississippi. Bur. Amer. Ethn., Bull. 71, 1920. 
Fietcurer, Auice C. [Article] Mourning. Handbook of American Indians, 
Bur. Amer. Ethn., Bull. 30, pt. 1,1907. pp. 951-953. 
Orr, R. B. Mortuary customs of our Indian tribes. Thirty-first Archaeo- 
logical Report, 1919. Appendix to the Report of the Minister of Educa- 
tion, Ontario. Toronto, 1919. pp. 56-77. 
Tuomas, Cyrus. [Article] Mortuary customs. Handbook of American Indians, 
Bur. Amer. Ethn., Bull. 30, pt. 1, 1907. pp. 945-947. 
Yarrow, H. C. Introduction to the study of mortuary customs among North 
American Indians. Washington, 1880. 
A further contribution to the study of the mortuary customs of the 
North American Indians. First Ann. Rept. Bur. Ethn., pp. 87-203, 1881.19 
For Yuchi: 
Speck, F. Ethnology of the Yuchi Indians. Anthrop. Pubs. Univ. Mus., 
Univ. Pa., vol. 1, no. 1, 1909. pp. 97-98. 
For Creek: 
Speck, F. The Creek Indians of Taskigi town. Mem. Amer. Anthrop. Asso., 
vol. 1, pt. 2, 1907. pp. 118-119. 
For Delaware: 
Loupon, ArcuiBaLp. A selection of some of the most interesting narratives of 
outrages committed by the Indians in their wars with the white people. 
Carlisle, 1808. Reprint, 1888. pp. 296-297. 
GreaG, J. Commerce of the prairies. Thwaites’ Early Western Travels, 
vol. xx, Cleveland, 1905. p. 316. 
For Menomini: 
Horrman, W.I. The Menomini Indians. Fourteenth Ann. Rept. Bur. Ethn., 
pt. 1, 1896. pp. 239-241. 
Skinner, A. Social life and ceremonial bundles of the Menomini. Anthrop. 
Papers Amer. Mus. Nat. Hist., vol. x11, 1915. pp. 21, 63-72. 
— Material culture of the Menomini. Mus. Amer. Ind., Indian Notes and 
Monographs, 1921. pp. 78-82. 
For Micmac, Montagnais, and Penobscot: 
Speck, F. Kinship terms and the family band among the northeastern Algon- 
kian. Amer. Anthrop., n. s. vol. xx, 1918. p. 149. 
For Ojibwa: 
Jonrs, W. Central Algonkin. Annual Archeol. Rept. for 1905, Toronto, 1906. 
p. 136. 
For Sauk: 
Hewirt, J. N. B. [Article] Sauk. Handbook of Amer. Inds., Bur. Amer. Ethn., 
Bull. 30, pt. 2, 1910. pp. 478-479. 
Micuetson, Truman. [Report on Field Work.] Jn Rept. Smithsonian Inst. 
for 1922, Washington, 1924. p. 63. 
Parrrerson, J. B., ed. Autobiography of Black Hawk. Oquawka, IIl., 1882. 
p- 67. 
SKINNER, ALANSON. Observations on the ethnology of the Sauk Indians. Bull. 
Pub. Mus. of Milwaukee, vol. v, no. 1, Milwaukee, 1923. pp. 1-57. 
[Also most of the references given under Fox at the beginning of this paper; 
early writers often do not distinguish customs of the two.] 
19 No additional references are given to Yarrow’s work for the practices of the various tribes, e. g., Sauk, 
