ATHAPASCAN LANGUAGES. 



35 



Gatschet (A. S.) — Coiuiiiufd. 



Areas and dialeots of tin- .sc\cn liii^ui»ti<; 

 stocks (pp. 406-421), fiiiljra<M'H Mik Tinn6, pj). 

 406-408.— (Jeueral reuiark.s, i)p. 467-485. 



Gilbert ((}. K.), Vocabulary of tho Arivaipa, 

 j)p. 424-465. 



Loew (O.), Vocalmlary (if tlu' .\ rival pa, pji. 

 468-469. 



Vocalmlary of till' Navajo, pp. 124-465, 



469. 



Yarrow (II. ('.), \oi:iliulai> of lli.' .licarilla. 

 pp. 424-465, 469-470. 



Apathe-Tiiiii^ l;ni<fn;ioc. | Dijilt'ct of 



thi'Na-isha baud. | (■ollcctodat Kiowii, 

 Apache aud Coinauche Agency, | Ana- 

 darko, Ind. Territory, | in Nov. and 

 Dec. 1884 | by | Albert S. Gatschet. 



Mami.script, pp. 1-74, sm. 4", in the liV)rary of 

 the lUircau of Kthnolof^y. 



Consists of words, phrases, and short texts 

 with interlinear translation into English. 



Lipan, | a diak'-ct of the Apache- 



Tiuu^- family | collected at | Fort 

 Griffin, Texas, (Shackleford county), 

 from Apache John, a Mexican | and 

 Lonis, a scont. | By Albert S. Gatschet 

 I September, 1884. 



Manuscript, pp. 1-69, sni. 4°, in tlie library of 

 the Bureau of Ethnolofiy. 



Consists of word.s, phra,se8, aud sentences, 

 tribal and clan names, and short storie.s, all 

 accompanied by an English translation. 



This manuscript has been partially copied by 

 Mr. Gatschet into a copy of Powell's Introduc- 

 tion to the Study of Indian Languages, second 

 edition. 



Term.s, i)hrase.s and sentences | from 



Apache dialects | gathered from varions 

 informants | by | Albert S. Gatschet. 



Manuscript, pp. 3-19, sm. 4°, in the library of 

 the Bureau of Ethnology. 



Tribal names aud other terms of the Chiraca- 

 hua Apaches, obtained fi'om delegates visiting 

 Washington, Feb. 12, 1881, pp. 5-6. — Short 

 vocabulary of the Tsigakinii dialect, pp. 7-8. — 

 Sentences and words in the NAvajo dialect, 

 obtained from F. H. Cushing. 1882, pj). 9-12.— 

 Nilvajo terms obtained from the interpreter of 

 a N4vajo delegation present in Washington in 

 March, 1885, pp. 14-16. — Some words of Jicarilla 

 Apache, from Eskie, an Apache in Washington, 

 Jan. 1884, pp. 18-19. 



Vocabulary of the Navajo langnage. 



Manuscript, 2 leaves, folio (a blank book), 

 in possession of its compiler. Obtained from 

 Mr. Frank H. Cushing in 1884. 



Consists of 10 words aud 50 phrases. 



[Words, phrases, .and sentences in 



the Umpkwa language.] 



Manuscript, 22 11. 4°, in the library of the 

 Bureau of Ethnology. Recorded in a copj- of 



G-atschet (.V.S.) — C'onliinicd. 



Introduction to tlie Study of Indian Languages, 

 tirst t^diliou. (Collected at (rrande Kondo 

 -Vgoncy. Oregon, in 1877. 



[\\'ords, phnises, aii<l sentences in 



tlu^ languages of the I'inal Apache.] 



^Llnus(^i]^t, )ip. ii-108, siu. 4 \ in j)ossession 

 of ils coiniiiler. Colb'cted IVom Xa-ki, an 

 .\pai lie whose Kngllsli name is Kobt. Mclntosli, 

 a student at Hampton, \'a., In August, 188;i. 



Contains al.so a number of te.Kts with inter- 

 llniar Hiiglisb translation. 



.Vlberf Samuel (Jatschet was born in St. Beat- 

 enberg, in the. IJernese Oberland, Switzerland, 

 October It, 18:t2. His propiedeiitii' education wa.s 

 ac(iuired in the lyceums of Neuchatel (184;!-]845) 

 and of Berue (1846-18,52), after which he followed 

 courses in the universit ies of Borne and Berlin 

 (18.52-1858). His studies had for their object tho 

 ancient world in all its ))hases of religion, his- 

 tory, language, aud art, and thereby his atten- 

 tion was at an early day directed to philologic 

 researches. In 1865 he began the publication of 

 a series of brief monographs on the local ety- 

 mology of his country, entitled "Ortsetymolo- 

 gische Forschuugcn aus der Schweiz " (1865- 

 1867). In 1867 he spent several months in London 

 ]>ursuing auti(iuarian studies in the British 

 Mii.seum. In 1868 he settled in New York and 

 ■ became a contributor to various domestic and 

 foreign i)eriodi<als. mainly on scientific sub- 

 jects. Drifting into a more attentive study of 

 the American Indians, he luiblished several 

 compositicms upon their languages, the most 

 important of which is "Zwolf Sprachen aus 

 dem Siidwesteii Nordamerikas,' Weimar, 1876. 

 This led to his appointment to the position 

 of ethnologist in the United States Geological 

 Survey, under Maj.John W. Powell, in March, 

 1877, when he removed to Washington, and first 

 CTuployed him.self in arranging the linguistic 

 manuscripts of the Smithsonian Institution, 

 now the property of the Bureau of Ethnology, 

 which forms a part of the Smithsonian Institu- 

 tion. Mr. Gatschet has ever since been actively 

 connected with that bureau. To iucrease its 

 linguistic collections and to extend his own 

 studies of the Indian languages, he has made 

 extensive trips of linguistic and ethnologic ex- 

 ploration among thi^ Indians of North America. 

 After returning from a six months' sojourn 

 among the Klamaths and Kalapuyas of Oregon, 

 settled on both sides of the Cascade Range, he 

 visited the Kataba in South Carolina and the 

 Cha'hta aud Shetimasha of Louisiana in 

 1881-'82, the Kayowe, Comanche, Apache, Tat- 

 tassee, Caddo, Naktche, Modoc, and other tribes 

 in the Indian Territory, the Toukawo and 

 Lipans. in Texas, and the Atakapa Indians of 

 Louisiana in 1884-'85. In 1886 he saw the 

 Tlaskaltecsat Saltillo, Mexico, a remnant of tho 

 Nahiia rai-e, brought there about 1575 from 

 AnahiuK', and was the first to discover the 

 atiinity of the Biloxi language with the Siouau 

 family. He also committed to writing the 

 Tuui;^ka or Touica language of Louisiana, never 



