INDEX 



Pagu. 

 ACKI.IN, number of specimens from. 50 

 AcoMA Indians, visit of, to Wash- 

 ington 28 



Agricultural epoch ix the West 



Indies 56. •'•T-uS 



/Sep Tainan cultun-. 



Aguas Bcenas, spi>cimen from 217 



AiTKES, Robert, article by ITl 



Alsea language, work on, by Dr. 



Frachtenberg: 21 



Altar stone, St. Kitts 160 



Amecos. a Trinidad nation 64 



American Museum, elbow stones 



In 205-206 



Amulets ll.-i-11.5. 233-:;34 



from Guadeloupe 136 



in Connell collection 165 



.\necdotb from IHi Tertre 22- 



Animal figures in Antillean art. 



See Bird stones. Frog. Heads. 



Monkey. Peccary. Reptiles. 



Shark. Squirrel, Turtle. 



Apache Indians, visit of, to Wash- 



in^on 28 



Appropriation for American Bth- 



NOLOGY 7 



Arawak, The — 



a stationary people 52 



artifacts of 35 



as pottery makers 56, 77 



assigned to the Greater Antilles- 55 



islands inhabited l)y .'il, 52 



natives of Trinidad classed as-- 64 



pottery of 261 



submerged by Carib— 52, 261, 267. 268 

 .see Tainan. 

 Architecture, Stone Age, of Amer- 

 ica and Europe compared 54 



Argyle midden 92 



Assyrian suBjEers, painted on 



cotton 30 



Awls from Guadeloupe 135 



AiES — 



absent from Porto Rico collec- 

 tions 131 



anchor 148 



asymmetrical 102-104, 138-139 



ceremonial 133, 142 



characteristic of Lesser An- 

 tilles 174. 180 



eared 108-109, 139-143 



eared, where found 59, 93 



engraved 109-110, 144-147 



from Dominica 125 



from Great Cayman 258 



from Guadeloupe- _- 1.32-133,138-143 



160658"— 34 ETH— 22 18 



Pace. 

 Axes — Continued. 



from St. Lucia 131 



from St. Vincent region 94-104, 



108-110 



from Tobago 78 



grooved 101-102, 145 



notched "4, 7S 



of unusual size 130 



perforated 147-148 



typical of Lesser Antilles 146.262 



winged, from Tobago 78 



with animal head on poll 140 



with caps 10(1-101 



with regular margins 13,S 



Ay-Ay, name for St. Croix 1615 



Bachilier y Morales, work of. on 



Cuban ethnology 24.S 



Bahamas — 



cultural relations of 2t>7 



number of specimens from 50 



Balbas, SEitOR, elbow stone owned 



by 209 



Ball, stone, from Barbados 80 



Ball cuubts of Porto Rico 170-171 



Balliceaux, island of 89-90 



excavations in 10 



number of specimens from 49 



Bali.ou. Howard M., compilation of 



bibliography by 25 



Banana Bat, mound at 89 



Barbacoas, name of pile dwellings-. 2.53 

 Barbados — 



aboriginal population of 7.S-79 



archeological work in 11 



artifacts from 86-88 



ilepi'pulation of 87 



early maps of 70 



English landing at 80 



number of specimens from 49 



Bathing customs of the Caribs-_ 22B. 230 

 Batons — 



ceremonial : 210-211 



clay, from Barbados 87 



from Dutch Guiana 132 



of wood 1.32 



Battowia. Indian caves of x^ 



HE.iDS — 231-232 



Beqi'ia — 



kitchen middens of S9 



number of specimens from 49 



Berlin Museum fIIr VOlkeh- 



Kl'NDE — 



celts in-- 177-178 



Guesde collection in 12.S 



West Indian objects In 50.215.218 



Big Man, portrait made of 2S 



273 



