274 



INDEX 



P«gc. 



Bird stones ^^ 221 



Boas, Fkaxz — 



archeological work of 170 



editorial worii of 20, 21 



excavations under supervision 



of 51 



paper by 26 



Bot;oRAs.WAi.DB.MAR, autlior of Chuk- 



cliee grammar 20 



BiiNAKi., an idol in tlie Cave of tlie 



Sun 264 



Bone, objbk"TS op 75.234,235 



Bowls — 



fragments of 70, Tl 



from Porto Rico area.-. 237-240. 241 



from Trinidad 69 



Bo.\, CLAY 70 



Bracelets of heads 230 



Branch, Dr. Christian, archeolo- 

 gical work of 167 



Breme.n' Miseim, West Indian ol)- 



jects in 50 



Brighton estate, rare specimen 



from 164 



British Museum, specimens in 178 



Burial customs 90. 225. 226 



Burial places — 



caves as 57,61,248 



mounds as 247 



BUSHNELL, D. I.. Jr., work of 22-23 



Byington, Cyrus, autlior of Choc 



taw dictionary 26 



Cabezas, Don Juan, specimen pre- 

 sented to National Museum by 229 



Caches, valu.altles buried in 61-62 



Cac'Imbas of the Isle of Pines 256-257 



Calabashes, valuables hidden In 62 



Camp Fire girls, requests for Infor- 

 mation from 28 



Canoes, method of making 105 



Capd IIaitien, stone nodule from 185 



Cakacolis, descril>ed l)y Laliat..- 230-231 

 Carib Indians — 



a nomadic people 52 



artifacts of 55 



assigned to the Lesser Antilles- 55 



Black, origin of 89 



culture epoch of 56 



inhaliitants of Lesser Antilles 



sulmierged by 52, 88, 261 



invasion of Lesser Antilles 



by 254-2.J5. 267 



islands inhabited by 51, ,"i2, 88 



not pottery makers 56 



settlements of, in Porto Rieo 171 



still living in Dominica 124 



survival among, of older cus- 

 toms and objects 52 



theory concei-ning 77-78 



Carib pottery, meaning of the term 261 



Carib stones, where found 93 



CARiNKPAiiOTOs, a nation of Trinidad 64 



Carbiacou — 



numi)er of specimens from 49 



pottery of 118 



Cassava, legend concerning, in Do- 

 minica 126-127 



Page. 

 Cassava bread — 



made from yuca 57 



stones for baking 223 



Casse-t£tes from Guadeloupe 134 



Catawba language studied liy Dr. 



Michelson 17 



Cato. Mu, Josiah, stone collars in- 



tcjpreted by 207 



CA\E DWELLEItS 



culture of 56, 28S 



of Cuba 246-247,255-256 



Cavei dwellings of Barbados 87 



Caves — 



as burial places 57. 61 



of Barbados 11. 82-83 



of Isle of Pines 257 



of Porto Rico 170-171 



of Trinidad 66 



Celts — 



ceremonial 176. 178, 251 



. characteristic of Greater An- 

 tilles 174, 180 



engiaved 174-183 



from Barbados * 86 



from Dominica 126,131 



from Guadeloupe 133-1,34 



from Martinique 131 



from Porto Rico 131 



from St. Lucia 131 



from Trinidad 74 



monolithic, not found in Lesser 



Antilles 94 



in(»nolithic. use of 176 



monolithic petaloid 173, 174 



of fossil shell 134 



petaloid, called thunder stones. 175, 



251 

 petaloid, from Porto Rico_ 171, 172-183 



petaloid, from St. Croix 168 



petaloid, from Tobago 7S 



petaloid, scarce in St. Vincent 94 



petaloid, typical of Greater 



Antilles 59, 146, 262 



shell, where found 59 



Ceremonial oiubcts. Sre Axes, 

 Batons, Celts, Collars, Knives, 

 Swallow sticks, Three-pointed 

 STONES, Zemis. 



Chamberlain, A. F.. work of 21 



Cher<»kee Indians, work among, of 



James Mooney 13 



Chester. Greville J., specimens 



collected by 80 



Cheyenne Indians, visit of. to 



Washington 28 



Chip-chip shell heap, description 



of 66-67 



Chippewa Indians, visit of, to 



Washington 28 



Chu'I'EWa music, paper on 26 



Chisels — 



fossil shell 80. 137 



stone 94-95. 135 



Chocol.ite grinders . 223. 224 



Srr Grinders. 

 Choctaw language. Dictionary of 



the 26 



