ETH. ANN. 13] 



INDEX. 



461 



Page 



Stone implements in cavate lodges 223, 224 



from Lake Superior xxviii 



Ohio xxvii 



, Study of xxxvi 



Storage cist described and figured 221, 250 



— room ill cavate htdge 228,229 



clift" dwellings 345, 350 



Strainers of basketry 17 



Summer claiis of the ZuDi 426, 428 



206 

 384 

 19 

 274 

 276 

 171 

 371 

 xxiii 



— village, Ruins of, on Rio Verde 



— , Zufii mythic origin of 



Sweat-houses made of mats 



— of the Omaha 



Swings of Omaha children 



Swiss lake dwellers, Use of flakes by . . 

 Symbolism of names of sacred societies. . 



— of the Indians 



Synonymy, tribal, Work on xxx v 



Tanning stones 



Taos, Architectural character of . 



scrapers from 



— , Stone axes in 



— , Tubes from 



TfePAHAiAN TitHULiof ZuSi mythology . 

 Tepehuani cave dwellings 



— , Defensive cbaraiter of 



— , Tron-tooth club of, described 



Tarahlmari cave dwellings 



Targets, Woven 



T:&K'oHAiAN t'LAHNANE of Zuni mythology 



Tennessee, Banner-stones from 121, 122, 123 



— , Boat-shape stones from 124, 125 



— , Bunts from 169 



— , Celts from 74. 75, 76, 77, 78. 79, 80, 81 . 82, 86 



— , Chipped flints from 144, 



145, 146, 147, 148, 149, 150 



— . Chisels from 83, 84 



— , Cones from, described and figured 114 



— , Discoidal stones from 100, 



101, 102, 103, 104, 105, 106, 107, 108. 109 



— , Distribution of stone art in 61 



— , Fabric-impressed potteiry from. 39, 40, 42, 43, 44 



— , Flakes from 174 



—, Gorgets from 118,119,120 



— , Grooved adzes from 70 



axes from 65, 66, 67, 68, 69, 70 



— « — stone from 95 



— , Mortars from 96, 97 



— , MuUer from, described 93 



— , Notched ax-form objects from 71 



— , Paint-stones from 115 



— , Pestles from 88,89,90,91 



— , Pipes from 129, 130, 131, 132 



— , Plummet from 112 



— , Scrapers from, described 85 



— , Scraper-form implement from 85, 86 



— , Sinkers from 97 



— , Spades from 135 



— , Spuds from 110 



— , Steatite potsherds from, used aa plum- 

 mets Ill 



— , Stemless perforators from 166, 167 



scrapers from 170 



—, Stemmed flints from 151, 152, 153, 



154, 155, 156, 157, 158, 159, 160, 161, 162, 163, 164 

 perforators from 167, 108 



169 

 64 

 128 

 383 

 349 



Page 

 Ternaux-Compans, Translation of Caeta- 



neda by 296 



Texas, Discoidal stones from 101,106 



— , Stemmed flints from 156 



Textile art, ilemoiron xliv, xlv, 3-15 



— fabrics in cavate lodges 228 



— ^, Study of xxxvi 



Thatcher, B. B., on mode of using stone- 



sinkera 97 



Thomas, Cyrus, Mound exploration by. . . 9 



— on finding of unusual boat-shape stone. 116 



— , Operations of xxvi, xxix, xxxvi 



Thrashing floors in Yerde valley 246, 305 



Thread, primitive. Manufacture of 21 



Throwing-stones in Swiss lake-dwell- 

 ings -■ 98 



Thunder mountain, Settlement of the 



Zuui on 326, 330, 429 



Time-reckoning by the Zufii 446 



Tobacco pouches of the Omaha 280 



Tomahawks of the Omaha 284 



Tongs of the Omaha 279 



Tonkawe language. Study of xl 



Totem clans, Myth regarding naming of. 386 



— posts. Absence of, among the Omaha. . . 274 



Tradition of Hopi water- people 188 



— , Pima, of Casa Grande 319 



Traveling gear, Omaha and Ponka 281 



Tsegi. *SVe Canyon de Chelly. 



Tubes described and figured 126 



Turquois among Indiana of lower Missis- 

 sippi 25 



TuRTLEBACKs described 136 



— in Illinois, Source of 171 



TusATAN, Primitive architecture of 261 



— , Kivas in 257 



— , Notched doorways in 254, 255 



— , Occupancy of Verdo valley by the 188 



— , "Water gent«s of the 188 



— . See Hopi. 



Tuskarora, Basketry of the 16 



— dictionary, Work on xli 



TuTELO, Study of language of the xxsix 



TwANA method of stripping bark 109 



TwiNE-TwasTERS, TTse of gorgets aa 117 



Tylor, E. B., on Amazon Indian drilling . 165 



arrow-chipping 139, 142 



Mexican maquahuill 144 



Peruvian obsidian working 172 



resemblanceof American and British 



arrowpoints 58 



similarity of stone products 59 



use of turtlebacks 139 



Ty Mawr, Pestle from, described 88 



Tjanam ehkona of Zuui mythology 381 



— yAluna of Zufii mythology 381 



Untailinq of men in Zuiii mythology 416 



TjTAHindiau hoe described 133 



XJte, Stone image used by the 116 



Utensils of the Omaha 277 



Vargas, Diego de, New Mexico recon- 

 quered by 231 



Veeard, Arrow-chipping by the 140 



Verde river. Former name of 186 



— valley. Aboriginal remains in 185-261 



Vermont, Turtleback caches in 137 



X^ rf^-^-^ 



