88 



BUREAU OF AMERICAN ETHNOLOGY 



[hull. 63 



Flower, William Henry 



• Catalogue of the specinjens illustrat- 

 ing the osteology and dentition of verte- 

 brated animals, recent and extinct, 

 contained in the museum of the Eoyal 

 college of surgeons of England, part i, 

 Man, London, 1879; 2d ed., ibid., 1907. 



Contains measurements of most of the follow- 

 ing skeletal remains: (1) Chonoan (1st ed., p. 178; 

 2d ed., pp. 309-310): nos. 1016-1018, 1020, 4 crania 

 (of which 1 9, 1 c? mutilated, 1 9 mutilated, and 

 1 9 ?) ; no. 1019, lower jaw, 2 ossa iimominata, and 

 a scapula; (2) Alacalufan (1st ed., p. 179; 2d ed. 

 p. 312): no. 1025, <? cranium and parts of skeleton, 

 previously described by Huxley (q. v.); (3) Yah- 

 gan (1st ed., p. 180; 2d ed., p. 314): nos. 1026-1027, 



1 9 and 1 c? cranium; (2d ed., pp. 312-313); nos. 

 1025-10258, 1027'; (4) Fuegian (2d ed., p. 312), no. 

 1025 >, 1 9 skeleton. The Chonoan remains col- 

 lected by Dr. Cunningham are classified in the 

 Catalogue as Patagonian, but it is fairly clear 

 that they are Chonoan, for no. 1020 is from the 

 Chonos Islands, and nos. 1016-1019 are apparently 

 the ones found in a small cave at Port Melinka, in 

 the Guaitecas Islands (Cunningham, pp. 335, 

 436). 



Most of the above Alacalufan and Yahgan ma- 

 terial was more fully studied and described by 

 Dr. Garson (q. v.). 



Fonck, Francisco Adolfo 



Viajes de Fray Francisco Menendez, 



2 vols., Valparaiso, 1896-1900. 



Dr. Fonck in this scholarly study gives inci- 

 dentally a summary of and the references to 

 most of the sources for the history of the mission 

 Chonos. See especially the following pages: 

 I, 5; n, 28-29, 33, 43, 87, 102, 151, 172, 192-193. 



Forster, George 



A voyage round the world in His 

 Britannic Majesty's sloop, Resolution, 

 commanded by Capt. James Cook, 

 during the years 1772, 3, 4, and 5, 2 

 vols., London, 1777. 



Contains (n, 498-506, 510) short descriptions of 

 the natives met at Christmas Sound and Good 

 Success Bay in Dec, 1774, by Capt. Cook'ssecond 

 expedition; based on the journal of Johann Rein- 

 hold Forster. See comments under J. Cook, 6. 



Forster, Johann Reinhold 



Observations made during a voyage 

 round the world, London, 1778; Germ, 

 tr. with additions by George Forster, 



3 vols., Berlin, 1784. 



Arranged in topical rather than chronological 

 order. Contains numerous though not impor- 

 tant data on the Fuegians (ch. 6, pp. 212-609, 

 passim). The writer, with his son George, ac- 

 companied the second Cook expedition. 



Foster, Henry. 1829 



Sec W. II. B. Webster. 



Foy, Willy 



Fiihrer durch das Rautenstrauch- 

 Joest-Museum dcr Stadt Coin, 3d ed.. 

 Coin, 1910. 



Scmipopular in tone. Dr. Foy agrees with 

 Dr. Graebner (q. v.) on the question of the 

 Oceanic origin of American aboriginal culture la 

 general and of the Fuegian in particular. See 

 especially pp. 26, 154. 



Freville, Anne FranQois Joachim de 



Histoire des nouvelles decouvertes 

 faites dans la Mer du Sud en 1767, 1768, 

 1769, & 1770, 2 vols., Paris, 1774. 



Contains (i, 18-24) an accoimt of the natives 

 of Good Success Bay, based on Capt. Cook's first 

 voyage. 



Frezier, Amedee Frangois 



Relation du voyage de la mer du Sud 

 aux cotes du Chili, du Perou et du 

 Bresil, fait pendant les annees 1712, 

 1713, & 1714, 2 vols., Amsterdam, 

 1717 (orig. Fr. ed., Paris, 1716); Engl, 

 tr., London, 1717; Dutch tr., Amster- 

 dam, 1718, 1727; Germ, tr., Hamburg, 

 1745; Span. tr. of parts relating to Chile, 

 Santiago de Chile, 1902; see also de 

 Brosses, ii, 204-219; abstr. in Prevost, 

 vol. XV. 



Frezier's expedition met no natives, ])ut ho 

 gives (1717 Fr. ed., i, 58-59; de Brosses, n, 208- 

 209) a few details on natives met probably at 

 Good Success Bay by one of Bnmet's officers in 

 1712 and by Villemorin in 1713, and some data 

 on the Chonos obtained in person from Dom 

 Pedro Molina and others (ibid., pp. 147-148, and 

 211-21 2, respectively). Not important. 



Friederici, Georg 



(a) Die Schiffahrt der Indianer, 

 Stuttgart, 1907. 



Contains (pp. 41-45) excellent descriptions of 

 the Fuegian bark canoe and plank boat, based 

 on museum material and the best written sources. 



(6) Ein Beitrag zur Kenntnis der 

 Trutzwaffen der Indonesier, Stidsee- 

 volker und Indianer. (In Baessler- 

 Archiv, Beitragezur Volkerkunde, heraus- 

 gegeben aus MiUeln des Baessler-Insti- 

 tuts, Beiheft vii. Leipzig-Berlin, 1915.) 



Contains some few data passim on Fuegian 

 offensive weapons. Cf. pp. 34, 43, and especially 

 pp. 13 and 66-67 on the supposed Fuegian " Wurf- 

 keule." See discussion of the throwing club in 

 Subject Bibliography , p. 215. 



