cooper] 



BIBLIOGRAPHY OF TRIBES OF TIERRA DEL FUEGO 



93 



Goicueta [or Goizueta], Miguel de — Con. 



and C. Tres Montes is apparently based on ob- 

 servations by Cortes Hojea made during the 

 Ulloa expedition in 1553-54, of which he was a 

 member (p. 489; Resales, a, vol. i, 216), as no 

 natives are mentioned as having been seen in 

 tliis territory on the 1557-58 expedition. 



Gdngora Marmolejo, Alonso de 



Historia de Chile desde su descubri- 

 miento hasta el aiio de 1575, 1575. 

 (Ed. in Col. hist. Chile, Santiago, 1862, 

 vol. II.) 



Contains (ch. 58, p. 153) a detailed description 

 of the plank boat. 



Gonzalez de Agiieros 



Descripcion historia! de la provincia 

 y archipielago de Chiloe en el Reyno 

 de Chile, y obispado de la Concepcion, 

 Madrid, 1791. 



Father Agiieros spent six years in the pro\'ince 

 and archipelago of Chilo6. He made liberal use 

 of the works of Fathers Ovalle and Lozano and 

 others in compiling his Descripcion. It contains 

 interesting data on the Chonos. See especially 

 the following: plank boats, pp. 66-67; Chilotan 

 weirs, pp. 70-71; seal hunting, p. 73; territory, 

 description (from Lozano) and division (from 

 Jos6 Garcia) of Chonos, pp. 185-186, 188. The 

 narratives on pp. 217-248 of the two missionary 

 expeditions of Fathers Marin and Real in 1778-79 

 and of Fathers Menendez and Bargas in 1779-80 

 into the Chonos' territory contain some notes of 

 value for the study of the history and linguistic 

 relationships of the Chonos 



Graebner, Fritz 



(a) Die melanesische Bogenkultur 

 und ihre Verwandten. (In Anthropos, 

 St. Gabriel-Modling bei Wien, 1909, 

 IV, 726-780, 998-1032.) 



Dr. Graebner maintains that the same strati- 

 fication of cultures is found in America as in 

 Indo-Oceanica, the successive waves- ha\'ing 

 passed from the latter over to the former. The 

 Fuegians would represent the earliest of these 

 waves, and culturally occupy the same low plane 

 relatively to the other American peoples ("als 

 Randbewohner der Okumene"), as the Tas- 

 manians did and tlie southeastern Australians 

 do to the other Indo-Oceanic peoples. The skin 

 mantle, the beeliive hut, and especially the half- 

 hitch coiled basketry, found in both archaic 

 areas, would thus be inlieritances from a common 

 cultural ancestry, not the result of convergence 

 (p. 1014). See also p. 1018 on Fuegian bark 

 canoe, plank boat, and bow. 



(6) Methode der Ethnologie, Heidel- 

 berg, 1911. 



An exposition and elaboration of the whole 

 " Kulturkreis " theory. Contains (p. 149) a few 

 remarks on the application of the theory to 

 Fuegia. 



Graebner, Fritz — Continued 



(c) Gewirkte Taschen und Spiral- 

 wulstkorbe in der Siidsee. (In Eth- 

 nologica ira Auftrage des Vereins zur 

 Forderung des stadtischen Rauten- 

 strauch-Joest-Museums f iir Volkerkunde 

 in Coin, herausgegeben von Dr. W. Foy, 

 Leipzig, 1913, ii, Heft 1, pp. 25-42.) 



Contains a short notice of the Fuegian half- 

 hitch coiled basketry (p. 39); of interest for com- 

 parative study of this kind of basketry. 



(d) Amerika und die Siidseekul- 

 turen. (Ibid., pp. 43-66.) 



An answer to Krause (q. v.). Contains on 

 pp. 47-48 further comments on the resemblance 

 of Fuegian to archaic Indo-Oceanic culture. 



Griewe, Wilhelm Frederick 



Primitives Siidamerika, Cincinnati, 

 1893. 



Contains (p. 234) a very short unimportant 

 account of the Alacaluf. The same account is 

 found in the author's History of South America, 

 Cleveland, 1913, pp. 152-154. 



Grubb, W. Barbrooke 



An unknown people in an unknown 

 land (Paraguayan Chaco), London, 

 1911. 



The author spent four years among the Yah- 

 gans at the Falkland Islands Mission (p. 26), but 

 gives no information about them, except that they 

 believed the moon to have turned a blood-red 

 color after the massacre by them of the English 

 missionaries, Capt. Fell and his party (p. 139). 



Guerrero Bascunan, Mariano 



Memoria que el delegado del supremo 

 gobierno en el Territorio de Magallanea 

 . . . presenta al seiior Ministro de Colo- 

 nizacion, 2 vols., Santiago de Chile, 

 1897. (Reference from review in A71- 

 nales de geogr., Paris, 1898, vol. vii, 

 Bibliographie de 1897, p. 270.) 



Toward the end of the first volume, according 

 to the reviewer, L. Gallois, there is an account of 

 the aborigines. "Obra rara por haberse que- 

 mado casi toda la edicicJn del ultimo tomo" 

 (Anrique). 



Guerrero Vergara, Bamon, ed. 



Los descubridores del estrecho de 

 Magallanes i sus primeros esploradores. 

 (In An. hidr. mar. Chile, Santiago, 1880- 

 81, vols, vi-vii; sep. repr., ibid. 1880.) 



Contains the original narratives of Ladrillero, 

 7uan de Mori and Sarmiento, an account of 

 Drake's voyage based chiefly on Pretty's nar- 

 rative, and (VI, 435-452) an excellent "reconstruc- 

 tion" of the voyage of Ulloa in 1553-54, gathered 



