68 



BUREAU OF AMEEICAN ETHNOLOGY 



[bull. C3 



Ascasubi, Miguel 



Informe cronologico de las misiones 

 del reino de Chile hasta 1789. (In Gay, 

 Documentoa, i, 300-400.) 



Contains on pp. 315-316 a few notes on the 

 liistory of the mission Chonos. 



Aspinall, Edward C. 



Conferencia dada en la Sociedad cien- 

 tlfica alemana de Santiago de Chile 

 sobre los aborigenea de la Tierra del 

 Fuego. (Reference from Dabbene, 

 who adds that it was published in the 

 society's Anales; I can not find it in the 

 Verhandlungen . ) 



This lecture was given July 25, 1888, by the 

 Rev. Mr. Aspinall after eighteen months' resi- 

 dence among the Yahgans as successor to the 

 Rev. Thomas Bridges. A summary of the 

 lecture by Dy (q. v.), was published in Globus, 

 vol. LV. 



Mr. Aspinall also contributed various letters 

 of minor anthropological interest to the South 

 American inisaionary magazine from 1886 on. 



[Avebury, Lord] Sir John Lubbock 



Prehistoric times, 7th ed., "thor- 

 oughly revised," New York-London, 

 1913. 



Contains descriptions of the Fuegians, pp. 

 531-537, 242-243, and notes passim. Based on the 

 older sources, as Hawkesworth, Callander's tr. 

 of de Brosses, Byron's Loss of Wager, Fitz-Roy, 

 a, Darwin, a, Weddell, Voice of Pity. The 

 Fuegian sections seem to have passed unscathed 

 through the "thorough re\ision." 



Bahnson, Kristian 



Etnografien fremstillet i dens hoved- 

 traek, 2 vols., Kjobenhavn, 1900. 



Contains (I, 539-548) a rather lengthy account 

 of the Fuegians; 2 photographs of Fuegian types; 

 2 woodcuts, illustrating material culture. 



Ball, John 



Notes of a naturalist in Soutli Amer- 

 ica, London, 1887. 



Dr. Ball states (p. 242) that he saw no Fue- 

 gians at all on his trip. His book contains only 

 a paragraph on the natives (pp. 260-261). He 

 was told (p. 261) by Dr. Feiiton, an old resident 

 of Punta Arenas, that it seems a wellattested fact 

 that the Canoe Indians when in danger from a 

 rough sea throw an Infant overboard. This 

 statement, however, needs confirmation (cf. 

 Subject Bibliography, p. 153). 



Bancarel, Fr. 



Collection abreg^e des voyages an- 

 ciens et modernes autour du monde, 12 

 vols., Paris, 1808-9. 



Contains abstracts of the following voyages: 

 Drake's (World encompassed), Cavendish's 

 (from Pretty), van Noort's, van Speilbergen's, 



Bancarel, Fr. — Continued 



L'llermite's, Clippcrton's, vol. n; Wallis', vol. 

 IV. The Fuegian anthropological data are given 

 verbatim in the following voyages: Byron's, vol. 

 VI; Bougainville's, vol. vn; Cook's first, vol. vm; 

 Cook's second, vol. ix. 



Banks, Joseph 



Journal of the Right Honourable Sir 

 Joseph Banks during Captain Cook's 

 first voyage in H. M. S. Endeavor in 

 1768-71, ed. by Sir Joseph D. Hooker, 

 London, 1896. Cf. Hawkesworth. 



Contains (pp. 49-50, 55-56, 58-61) the best 

 description that has come dowm to ns of the Onas, 

 very probably Manekcnkn, met by Capt. Cook's 

 first expedition in Jan., 1769, at Good Success 

 Bay. On p. 60 two words lialleca, "beads," and 

 oouda, "water." The latter seems to be Mine- 

 kenkn rather than Shilk'nam. 



Barclay, William S. 



(a) The land of Magellanes, with 

 some account of the Ona and other 

 Indians. (In Geogr. jour., London, 

 Jan., 1904, xxiii. no. 1, pp. 62-79.) 



Contains a quite long and detailed accoiuit of 

 nearly all phases of Ona culture (pp. 68-79), to- 

 gether with a few brief notes on the Yahgans and 

 Alacaluf (pp. 63-66). 



(6) Life in Tierra del Fuego. (In 

 Nineteenth century and after, London, 

 Jan.-June, 1904, lv, 97-106.) 



Covers nearly the same groimd as the preced- 

 ing article but somewhat less fully. 



(c) At the world's end, being an 

 account of the now almost extinct 

 Canoe-dwcUers and other tribes of 

 Tierra del Fuego. (In Sup})lemcnt to 

 Illu^lrated London news, Jan. 30, 1904, 

 cxxiv, pp. i-iv.) 



Covers the same groimd as the preceding arti- 

 cles, lacking, however, some details; contains an 

 Ona legend and a few notes on the Yahgans, not 

 found in (o) and (6); also several excellent photo- 

 graphs and sketches. 



The foregoing articles are important contribu- 

 tions to our knowledge of the Onas. They are 

 based on somewhat limited personal observation 

 during a visit to eastern Fuegia from Jan. 25 to 

 the end of Feb., 1902, but chiefly (according to 

 Dr. Dal)bene, a, p. 78, who traveled with Mr. 

 Barclay) on information furnished by Mr. Lucas 

 Bridges (q. v.). 



Bargas, Ignacio. 1779-80 



See Francisco Menendez. 

 Barmon, de 



Esquissc d'un voyage au d^troit de 

 Magellan. (In Soc. imper. acad. de 

 Cherbourg, seance 4 juil., 1862.) (Ref- 

 erence from Anrique, p. 393.) 



