cooper] BIBLIOGKAPHY OF TRIBES OF TIERKA DEL FUEGO 



125 



Sarmiento de Gamboa, Pedro — Contd. 

 Hakl. soc, vol. xci, London, 1895. Cf. 

 Hernandez. 



Contains numerous notes passim (pp. 81, 91, 

 109-111, 120, 122-123, 191-193, 19G-198, 209-212, 

 228-229; An. hidr., pp. 422, 428, 439, 445^47, 487- 

 488, 497-498, 511) on the culture of the natives, 

 all probably Alacaluf, of different points between 

 Concepcion Strait and the modem Pimta Arenas 

 region, and a few details (pp. 244-240; An. hidr., 

 pp. 519-520) on the Onas of Gente Grande Bay. 

 Ten native local names (pp. 203-210 passim; An. 

 hidr., pp. 493-497) gathered from some Indians 

 taken aboard seemingly at Tuesday Bay, Desola- 

 tion Island. Sarmiento had considerable contact 

 with the natives in 1579-1580, but his reports of 

 their culture are rather meager. His most fhter- 

 esting data are: Cave burial (p. 120; An. hidr., 

 445); the local names, vaguely suggestive at 

 least of the Alacaluf language; and the descrip- 

 tion of the Onas, the earliest extant account of 

 this tribe. 



The fabulous details found in Argensola's 

 account (q. v.) of Sarmiento's voyage are absent 

 from the original narrative. 



Schlesinger, Georg 



[Account of Fuegians encountered 

 while aboard the Junon Oct., 1878, 

 between English Reach and Isthmus 

 Bay.] (In Verh. Berlin. Ges. f. Anthr. 

 u. s. w., Nov. 14, 1881, pp. [393J-394.) 

 Contains some brief notes on the Alacaluf met 

 casually three times; not important. 



Schmidt, Emil 



Catalog der im anatomischen Institut 

 der Universitat Leipzig aufgestellten 

 craniologischen Sammluug. (In Die 

 anthrop. Sammlungen Deutschlands: Pri- 

 vat-Sammlungen, i, 1886.) 



Contains (pp. 168-169^) the description and 

 measurements of the skulls of a Payo man and a 

 half-breed Payo woman. The Payos of south- 

 ern Chiloe are suspected of having Chonoan blood 

 in them. 



Schmidt, Wilhelm 



(a) L'origine de I'idee de Dieu, vol, 

 I, Paris, 1910, repr. from Anthropos, 

 1908-1910, vols, m-v; Germ. tr. rev. 

 and enl., vol. i, Miinster i. W., 1912. 



Contains (p. 103; tr., p. 145) a paragraph on 

 the Fuegian "supreme Deity," based on I^ang. 



(6) and Hestermann, Ferdinand 

 Volker und Kulturen. (In Mensch 



aller Zeiten, 3 vols., Berlin-Miinchen- 



Wien, 1911-, vol. ni, 1914-.) 



Contains (pp. 112-127) a re\iew of the evidence 

 for the application of the Kulturkreis theory to 

 America, especially South America. See in par- 



Schmidt, Wilhelm — Continued 



ticular the section on pp. 115-117 dealing with 

 the Fuegians. Father Schmidt agrees in the 

 main with Dr. Graebner. 



Schuller, Rodolfo R. 



Bibliography of Spanish America. 



MSS. 



Consists of about 7,000 titles covering history, 

 geography, languages, etc.; not, however, as im- 

 portant for Fuegia as for the rest of the continent. 

 It was acquired by the Library of Congress, 

 Washington, D. C, June 17, 1913. 



Extensive additions to the above bibliography 

 were later acquired by the Library of Congress 

 and are listed under the entry "Collectanea 

 bibliographica americana, 1915." 



Second voyage round the world in the 

 years 1772, 3, 4, 5, by James Cook, 

 Esq. . . . drawn up from authentic 

 papers, London, 1776. 



An apocryphal account of Capt. Cook's second 

 voyage. 



Seelstrang, Arturo 



Apuntes historicos sobre la Pata- 

 gonia y la Tierra del Fuego. (In Bol. 

 Inst, geogr. argent., Buenos Aires, 1879- 

 1882, 1884-85, vols, i-iii, v-vi.) 



An excellent history of the first century and 

 a half of Magellanic exploration. The writer 

 keeps close to the original documents, from which 

 he paraphrases or quotes verbatim a great part 

 of the anthropological material. 



Segers, Polidoro A. 



Habitos y costumbres de los indios 

 Aonas. (In Bol. Inst, geogr. argent., 

 Buenos Aires, 1891, xii, cuad. 5-6, pp. 

 56-82.) 



An important paper on Ona culture and to a 

 lesser extent on Ona language. Its publication 

 may be said to have marked an epoch in the 

 study of the Onas, and though more ample 

 material has since appeared. Dr. Segers' article 

 still remains a valuable original source, especially 

 on Onan culture. The author accompanied the 

 Lista expedition in 1886 and later spent three 

 years in Tierra del Fuego as a naval surgeon. 

 His cultural data have been verified by later 

 explorers, except his division (p. 81) of the Onas 

 into six tribes, the names he gives being, accord- 

 ing to Mr. Lucas Bridges (Lehmann-Nitsche, d, 

 p. 233), merely local names. A larger Ona dic- 

 tionary compiled by Dr. Segers was unfortu- 

 nately lost in a shipwreck. The present article 

 contains a few notes on word composition, a 

 vocabulary of 91 words on pp. 80-Sl and several 

 additional words on pp. 69, 70, 77-79. The vo- 

 cabulary is, according to Mr. Lucas Bridges 

 (Lehmann-Nitsche, d, p. 237), "lleno de errores 

 y con muchas voces yag&n." Ten at least of 

 the words seem to be Manekenkn rather than 

 Shilk'nam. 



