108 



BUREAU OF AMERICAN ETITNOLOOY 



f Bni.L. r,s 



Lovisato, Domenico — Continued 



])r. Lovisato uccompunied llie Bove expedi- 

 tion as geologist. He was in Fuegian territory 

 from May 1 to June 17, 1.SS2, and during this time 

 had the same opportunities and advantages as 

 Capt. Bove (q. v.)- He was a careful and exact 

 observer. His chief original contribution, dis- 

 tinct from Capt. Bove's, is his splendid study of 

 the Elizaljeth Island kitchen middens. Tho 

 native words he gives passim were gathered 

 directly from five Yahgans who spoke some 

 English, and one of whom spoke Ona. The 

 Yahgan words were then submitted for correc- 

 tion, first to Mr. Th. Bridges and afterwards to 

 Messrs. Whaits and Lawrence (6, p. 132; c, p. 

 722). 



Lozano, Pedro 



Historia de la Compania de Jesus de 

 la provincia del Paraguay, 2 vols., 

 Madrid, 1754-55. 



Father Lozano gives (vol. ii, bk. 5, ch. 4, and 

 bk. 7, ch. 3 and 16) an important account of the 

 first missions to the Chilotans and Chonos in 

 1609-1614. This account contains (passim, see 

 especially pp. 31, 33-34, 4.54, 558-561) some valu- 

 able data on the culture of the Chonos, and (pp. 

 4.56, 560) some interesting information regarding 

 Father Matheo Estevan's (q. v.) studies and 

 compositions in the Chonoan language. While 

 Father Lozano does not write of the Chonos from 

 personal experience with them, he had access to 

 an extensive collection of published narratives 

 and manuscript missionary reports and letters. 

 The description of the Chonos and Huilles on 

 pp. 33-34 is apparently taken from Del Techo, 

 pp. 15&-160. 



Lubbock, Sir John 

 See Avebury. 



Lucy-Fossarieu, Pierre Henry Richard de 



Ethnographie de I'Amerique ant- 



arctique, Patagons, Araucaniens, Fuo- 



giens. {Memoires Soc. d'ethnogr., no. 



4, Paris, 1884, pp. 103-179.) 



An extensive monograph, the Fuegian sec- 

 tion (pp. 155-178) of which is based on a compre- 

 hensive study of the then extant written sources 

 and on personal observation of the group of 11 

 Alacaluf in the Jardin d'Acclimatation at Paris. 

 The paper is well written, but in the light of 

 newer material published since the eighties 

 would need very considerable revision. The 

 author's account of the mourning rite (?) wit- 

 nessed at Paris (pp. 173-174), and the short 

 vocabulary (p. 175), are of special interest. 

 These 12 words, most of which by comparison 

 with the other accessible Alacalufan vocabularies 

 appear to make some approach to correctness, 

 were gathered under very unfavorable conditions 

 by the author from the group mentioned above. 

 A summary of the monograph was published 

 by Hale (q. v.). 



Luschan, Felix von 



Ubcr Bodte aus Baunirindo. (In 

 Aus der Natur, Leipzig, 1907-8, in, 

 1. Halbband, i)p. 15-22, 49-53.) 



Containsonp. 22 an account and illustration of 

 the Fuegian bark canoe, ascribed, by oversight 

 no doubt, to the Onas. The paper is interesting 

 for comparison with bark canoes from other parts 

 of the world. Excellent illustrations. 



Maccarthy, Jacques, ed. 



Choix de voyages dans les quatre par- 

 ties du monde, 10 vols., Paris, 1821-22. 



Contains (x, 242-265) a French translation of 

 de C6rdoba's lengthy description of the .Vlacaluf 

 met at Port Famine and Port Gallant on the first 

 expedition. 



Macdouall, John 



Narrative of a voyage to Patagonia 

 and Tierra del Fiiego through the Straits 

 of Magellan in H. M. S. Adventure and 

 Beagle in 1826 and 1827, London, 1833. 



Contains (especially pp. 104-120, 125-135, 17.5- 

 180) rather copious cultural data. The writer ac- 

 companied the first expedition, as the above 

 dates show. He had good opportimities for first- 

 hand study. He seems to have been an exact 

 observer, but his account is sketchy, popular, 

 anecdotal, and lacking in detail. One Alacaluf 

 word, p. 110. 



Machado, Francisco 



\'iajes del piloto Don Francisco Ma- 

 chado a los archipielagos occidentales 

 de Patagonia [1768-69]. (Ed. by Fran- 

 cisco Vidal Gormaz, in An. hidr. mar. 

 Chile, Santiago, 1889, xiv, 57-149.) 



The diaries and Beranger's instructions con- 

 tain a few data whith have a slight bearing on the 

 problem of Chonoanlinguisticrelationslui)s. See 

 pp. 72. 78, S4-Sli, 89, 95, 10.5, 121. 



Magalhaes, Fernao de. 1520 



Magellan saw no natives when he passed 

 through the Strait in 1520, but "one night a 

 great number of fires were seen, mostly on their 

 left hand" (Maximilianus Transylvanus, Do 

 Moluccis insulis, Cologne, 1523; Oviedo, Hist, 

 gen. de las Indias, ii, bk. 20, ch. i). The hut 

 and over 200 graves found apparently at Posses- 

 sion Bay (Herrera, Hist. gen. de los heehos de 

 los castellanos, dec. 2, bk. 9, ch. 14), were in all 

 probability Tehuelchean. Cf. for bibliography, 

 Oscar Koelliker, Die erste Umseglung der Erdc 

 durch Fernando do Magallancs und Juan Sebas- 

 tian del Cano, Miinchcn-I./eipzig, 1908. 



Magoths, W. 



A briefe relation of a voyage of The 

 Delight a ship of BristoU one of the 

 consortsof M. John Chidley esquire and 



