cooper] 



BIBLIOGRAPHY OF TRIBES OF TIERRA DEL FUEGO 



75 



Brinton, Daniel Garrison — Continued 

 on the following points in particular: Chonoan 

 and other Fuegian tribal names and division^, 

 classification of Chonos with Araucanians, dates 

 of first mission among Chonos and of removal of 

 Chonos to Chaulafiec, remarks about family af- 

 fection, the bolas and woven baskets that hold 

 water, etc. On p. 364 a comparative vocabulary 

 of 21 words, the Alacalufan section from Fitz-Roy, 

 the Yahgan apparently from Bridges and Fitz- 

 Roy. Dr. Brinton (p. 332) found no verbal re- 

 semblance between the Fuegian and Tapuyan 

 languages. 



(d) Studies in South American na- 

 tive languages. (In Proc. Amer. 

 philos. soc, Pliiladelphia, 1892, xxx, 

 45-105; repr., ibid., 1892.) 



Reproduces the Alacalufan and Yahgan vo- 

 cabularies from the preceding work. 



(e) Fiu"ther notes on Fuegian lan- 

 guages. (Ibid., pp. 249-254.) 



A notice of La Guilbaudiere's vocabulary of 

 which 22 words are given on p. 250, and a com- 

 parison of Yahgan words with Dr. Segers' Ona 

 vocabulary, which is given nearly in full on pp. 

 2.52-2.53. Dr. Brinton's conclusion that the Onas 

 are linguistically nearer to the Yahgans than to 

 the Tehuelches is explained by the fact that Dr. 

 Segers' list contains many errors and many 

 Yahgan words (Lehmann-Nitsche, d, p. 237). 



Brosses, Charles de 



Histoire des navigations aux terres 

 australes, 2 vols., Paris, 1756; Engl, tr., 

 by John Callander, 3 vols., Edinburgh, 

 1766-1768; Germ, tr., by Johann Chris- 

 toph Adelung, Halle, 1767. 



From the anthropologist's standpoint perhaps 

 the most satisfactory extant history of the first 

 two centuries and a quarter of Magellanic ex- 

 ploration. De Brosses paraphrases or quotes 

 verbatim practically all the Fuegian anthropo- 

 logical material found in the original documents 

 to which he had access. In the following sum- 

 mary of contents the pages of the French edition 

 on which references to the Fuegians occur are 

 given. 



Vol. I: Magellan, 138; Loaysa, 152; Alcazaba, 

 1G4-1C5; Drake, 186, 188-189; Sarmiento, 200-216 

 passim; Cavendish, 224, 229, 231, 233; Chidley, 

 234; Hawkins, 245; de Cordes and de Weert, 

 278-280, 283-287; van Noort, 296-299, 301; van 

 Speilbergen, 344; the Nodals, 423-^24; L'Her- 

 mite, 439, 440-446. Vol. n: Narbrough, 30-36, 41; 

 Sharp, 44-45; de Gennes, 107, 109, 111; Beau- 

 chesne-Gouin, 11.5-118, 120; Frezier, 208-209, 

 211-212; Labarbinais, 220-221; Anson, 284-290; 

 Labbe, 434-4:55; Nyel, 438-439. For the voyages 

 of Ladrillero, Cortes Hojea, and Sarmiento, de 

 Brosses had not access to the important original 

 documents. 



Brouwer, Hendrick 



Journael ende historis verhael van de 

 reyse gedaen by oosten de straet le 

 Maire, naer de custen van ChiH, onder 

 het beleyt van den Heer Generael Hen- 

 drick BrouMer inden jare 1643 voor- 

 gevallen, Amsterdam, 1646; Germ. tr. 

 (mentioned in Introd. to Span, tr., 1. o. 

 infra, p. 4), 1649; Engl. tr. in Chiu-chill, 

 vol. i; Span, tr., in An. hidr. mar. Chile, 

 Santiago, 1892, xvi, 1-88. 



Brouwer saw some abandoned huts at Valen- 

 tine Bay, but no natives. Here and there in his 

 account of the Chilotes are a few cultural data 

 common to the Chonos as well: not important. 



Brown, Robert 



The races of mankind, 4 vols., Lon- 

 don-Paris-New York, 1873-1876. 



Contams (i, 310-313) an unimportant but fairly 

 accurate, popular account of the Fuegians, Ijased 

 chiefly on Darwin, o, and Fitz-Roy, a. 



Brownell, Charles de Wolf 



The Indian races of North and South 

 America, Cincinnati, 1853. 



Contains (pp. 030-636) a good but now out-of- 

 date account of the Fuegian Canoe Indians, based 

 chiefly on Friehard, Fitz-Roy, a, and Wilkes. 



Bruch, Carlos 



See Outes, d and e. 



Bry, Theodor, and others, ed. 



Collectio peregrinationum in Indiam 

 occidentalem, partes xiii (xiv), Franco- 

 furti ad Moenum, 1590-1634. 



Contains Latin and German translations of 

 the following voyages: Cavendish's (by Pretty), 

 pt. vm, 1599; de Weert 's and van Noort 's, pt. ix, 

 1601-2; van Speilbergen's, pt. xi, 1620; L'Her- 

 mite's, Lat., pt. xm, 1634, Germ., pt. ::rv. 1030. 



Bulkeley, John, and Cummins, John 



A voyage to the South-Seas, by His 

 Majesty's ship Wager, publ. anon., 

 London, 1743; with authors' names, 

 ibid., 1743; repr. London-Philadel- 

 phia, 1757; Kerr, vol. xvii; abstr. in 

 Prevost, XV, 363-384. 



Contains (anon, ed., pp. 17-18, 27-31, 58, 63-64, 

 97-98, 107; other 1743 ed. and repr. of 1757, pp. 

 22-24, 36-41, 77-78, 84-85, 130-131, 143-144) nu- 

 merous data on the natives, very probably 

 Chonos and Alacaluf, encountered in 1741 from 

 Wager Island in the Guaianeco .4rehipelago to 

 Cape Quod in the Strait. For further com- 

 ments, see Byron, a. 



