cooPEn] BIBLIOGRAPHY OF TRIBES OF TIERRA DEL FUEGO 



101 



Jakob, Christfried — Continued 



Rev. Museo de La Plata, La Plata, 1905, 

 xn, 59-72.) 



Contains (pp. 65-71) a study of the brains of 

 the same Yahgan man and Alacalufan woman 

 whose cadavers and osteological remains were 

 studied by Dr. ten Kate (q. v.). Plates i-ii, vii. 



Jane, Jolm 



The last voyage of the worshipful! M. 

 Thomas Candish esquire, intended for 

 the South sea, the Philippinas, and 

 the coast of China. (In Hakluyt, 2d 

 ed., Ill, 842-852; Henry, vol. i.) 



Contains only an unimportant sentence or 

 two on some natives, probably Alacaluf, met in 

 the Strait in 1592 by the Cavendish expedition of 

 which Jane was a member. 



Jansz Potgieter, Barent 



Wijdtloopigh verhael van 'tgene de 

 \ijf schepen (die int jaer 1598. tot Rot- 

 terdam toegherust werden / om door de 

 Straet Magellana haren handel te dry- 

 ven) wedervaren is /tot den 7. Sep- 

 tember 1599. toe / op welcken dagh 

 Capiteijn Sebald de Weert, met twee 

 schepen / door onweder vande vlote 

 versteken werdt, Amsterdam, 1600; 

 abridged in Commelin, vol. i, and Hart- 

 gers; Fr. tr., de Renneville; Engl, tr., 

 London, 1703; Lat. and Germ, tr., de 

 Bry, pt. ix; de Brosses, vol. i, pp. 274- 

 294; abstr. in Kerr, vol. x, in Harris, 

 vol. I, bk. 1, ch. 6, in Prevost, vol. xv, 

 in Laet, bk. 12, Lat. and Fr. ed., bk. 13. 



Contains numerous notes on the natives, prob- 

 ably Alacaluf, met casually in different parts of 

 the Strait of Magellan in 1599-1600. Barent 

 Jansz, who was surgeon of the fleet, spent nine 

 months in the Strait and had frequent contact 

 with the natives. Two very interesting cuts 

 illustrating physical type and material culture. 



Jenkins, John Stilwell 



Recent exploring expeditions to the 

 Pacific, and the South Seas, under the 

 American, English, and French gov- 

 ernments, London, 1853. 



Contains (pp. 49-55) a description of the na- 

 tives of Good Success Bay, Orange Harbor, and 

 Nassau Bay met by Admiral Wilkes' party, with 

 the addition of some fiu'ther details from Drake 

 and Darwin. 



The same passage is found in the author's 

 Voyage of the United States exploring squadron 

 commanded by Capt. Charles Wilkes . . • De- 

 troit, 1853, pp. 70-75. 



Journal of a voyage round the world in 

 His Majesty's ship Endeavour, in the 

 years 1768, 1769, 1770 and 1771, Dub- 

 Un, 1772. 



Contains (pp. 42-45) an account of the natives 

 met at Good Success Bay by Capt. Cook's first 

 expedition. Authorship of Journal uncertain. 



Journal of the Resolution's voyage, in 



1772, 1773, 1774 and 1775 . . . Lon- 

 don, 1775. 



An apocryphal account of Capt. Cook's second 

 voyage. 



Joyce, Thomas Athol 



South American archaeology, Lon- 

 don, 1912. 



The author touches only lightly (passim, espe- 

 cially pp. 4, 218, 239, 2fi-242) on the probable 

 relationsliip of the Alacaluf and Onas to other 

 South American peoples. 



Juillerat, Paul 



Les Fuegiens du Jardin d'Acclima- 

 tation. (In La Nature, Paris, 2® sem., 

 1881, IX, 295-298.) 



An unimportant account of the Fuegians, writ- 

 ten apropos of the exhibition of the Hagenbeck 

 group of Alacaluf at Paris, and based chiefly on 

 Fitz-Roy, Darwin, d'Orbigny. One woodcut. 



Juliet, Carlos 



Informe del ayudante de la comision 

 exploradora de Chiloe i Llanquihue. 

 (In An. hidr. mar. Chile, Santiago, 1875, 

 I, 263-338.) 



Contains a lengthy description (pp. 316ff.) of 

 the aborigines of the islands from Chilo6 to the 

 Strait, based more on good written sources than 

 on personal observation. The writer describes 

 passim some points of Chonoan culture, but does 

 not always distinguish clearly enough between 

 the Chilotans and the nomadic Chonos. 



Karsch-Haack, F. 



Das gleichgeschlectliche Leben der 

 Naturvolker, Miinchen, 1911. 



The author bases his statement (p. 446) on a 

 passage in Amdt's Biologische Studien (n, p. 

 247), but adds that the latter gives no authority 

 for the charge. The only first-hand reference to 

 the subject I have met in Fuegian literature is 

 Dr. Hyades": "Les Fuegiens parlent en plai- 

 santant de la pederastie: tQatjmana, mais ne la 

 pratiquent jamais" (g, p. 294; of. also p, p. 334; 

 Mondifere, 114). 



Kate, Herman ten 



Materiaux pour servir k I'anthro- 

 pologie des Indiens de I'Argentine. 

 (In Rev, Micseo de La Plata, 1905, xii, 

 31-57.) 



