80 



BUREAU OF AMERICAN ETHNOLOGY 



r BULL. G3 



Cook, James — Continued 



1777; 4th ed., ibid., 1784; Kerr, vols, 

 xiv-xv; Fi'. tr. by J. B. A. Suard, 6 

 vols., Paris, 1778; Mont^mont, vols, 

 vn-ix; Dutch, tr. by J. D. Pasteur, 

 Leyden, etc., 1797-1809, vols, iv-vii; 

 abstr. in Bancarel, vol. ix. 



Contains good but somewhat brief notes on the 

 natives met at Christmas Sound (n, 183-184) and 

 at Good Success Bay (n, 192) in Dec, 1774. The 

 former had angular spear shafts (G. Forster, ii, 

 5()1), as have the modem Yahgans; they used a 

 characteristic Alacahifan expression, pcchera, but 

 had i)robably, like the above Good Success Bay 

 natives who also used it, borrowed it from the 

 Alacaluf. 



Cooper, John Montgomery 



Fuegian and Chonoan tribal rela- 

 tions. (In Proc. 19th Internal, congr. 

 of Americanists, Washington, 1915, pp. 

 445-453, 1917.) 



A general discussion of tribal relations in the 

 Magellanic and Chonoan archipelagos. 



Coppinger, Richard William 



Cruise of the Alert, 1878-1882, 

 London, 1883. 



One of our most important sources, chiefly for 

 the culture, but also for the language and somar 

 tology, of the Alacaluf of the Patagonian chan- 

 nels and the western Strait. Dr. Coppinger 

 cruised around this territory from January to 

 May, 1879, and later from October, 1879, to April, 

 1880, during which time he had excellent oppor- 

 tunities for observation. His accounts are full, 

 detailed, and precise. Of special value are the 

 following: Lengthy descriptions of the ^^'est 

 Patagonian Channel Alacaluf (pp. 48-oC) and of 

 the Tilly Bay Alacaluf (pp. 118-122); stature 

 measurements of 8 men and descriptive somatol- 

 ogy (pp. 49-.50); Alacaluf vocabulary (see below); 

 discovery of skeletal remains at RosarioBay(pp. 

 54, 69-70), of stone axhead in old kitchen-midden 

 (pp. 52-53), and of stone weirs (pp. 125-120) at 

 Swallow Bay; descriptions of plank boat (pp. 

 43-44) and of spearhead making (pp. 119-121). 

 Other data of less importance (pp. 40-44, 57-59, 

 63-05,67, 74, 103, 112-113, 123). Several woodcuts, 

 especially the one opposite p. 34. 



The Alacaluf vocabulary (p. 122), containing 

 50 words and 5 children's names, was taken by 

 signs from an old native at Tilly Bay. Subse- 

 quently Dr. Coppinger checked the list by re- 

 peating the words and having the native point 

 out the oVjjects. Some of the words were further 

 tested on natives later met at Port Gallant and 

 were found to be correct. 



Cora, Guido 



La spedizione italo-platense in Pata- 

 gonia. (In Cora's Cosmos, Torino, 

 1882-83, VII, 181-192, 231-239, 272-277.) 



Cora, Guido — Continued 



A good synopsis of Capt. Bove's report. Con- 

 tains the cultural data somewhat abbreviated, 

 the stature measurements, and 107 words from 

 the Yahgan vocabulary. The statement (p. 234) 

 "un uomo ha generalmente quattro mogli'' dif- 

 fers slightly from the original "raramente pero 

 si vedono uomini con piu di quattro mogli'' 

 (Bove, a, p. 793; 6, p. 13(i; c, p. 128; d, Arch., 

 p. 292), and differs still more from the statements 

 in Bridges, Hyades, and others. 



Cordemoy, Camille de 



Au Chili, Paris, 1899. 



Contains (pp. 0-7) meager, unimportant notes 

 on some Canoe Indians casually met. One Ona 

 photograph. 



Cordes, Simon de. 1599-1600 



See Jansz Potgieter, Barent. 



Cordoba, Antonio de. 1786, 1788-89 



Sec Vargas Ponce. 



Coreal, Francois 



Voyages de . . . aux Indes Occiden- 

 tales, 3 vols., Amsterdam, 1722; 2 vols., 

 Paris, 1722; 2 vols., Bruxelles, 1736. 



Contains (Amsterdam ed., in; Paris and Brux- 

 elles ed., II) a French translation of Narbrough's 

 voyage. 



Coriat, Isador H. 



Psychoneuroses among primitive 

 tribes. (In Journ. of abnormal psy- 

 chology, Boston, Aug.-Sept., 1915, x, 

 no. 3, pp. 201-208.) 



An attempt to explain occasional nervous at- 

 tacks among the Yahgans and Onas, during 

 which they run amuck, on the basis of Dr. 

 Freud's theory of sexual repression. Informa- 

 tion regarding these nervous outbreaks (pp. 202- 

 200) as well as some good data on Yahgan and 

 Ona music and medicine (pp. 205-200) and on 

 Yahgan mourning, dreams, taboos, and myths 

 (pp. 205-207) were furnished to Dr. Coriat by 

 Prof. Furlong. 



Corra, E. 



Les sauvages de la Terre de Feu, leur 

 origine, leurs moeurs et leur acclima- 

 tation, Paris, 1881. (Keference from 

 Dabbene.) 



Seemingly an imimportant work. 



Correa Luna, Carlos 



Tierra del Fuego: Expedici6n Nor- 

 denskjold. (In Bol. Inst, geogr. ar- 

 gent., Buenos Aires, 1897, xviii, 158- 

 163.) 



\ summary of Dr. Nordenskjold's itinerary; 

 not of importance. 



