98 



SMITHSONIAN MISCELLANEOUS COLLECTIONS VOL. 66 



blance to an artificial wall is so close that for many years it was 

 supposed to be the wall of a prehistoric dwelling (see fig". 120). 



ETHNOLOGICAL RESEARCHES IX OREGON AND WASHINGTON 



During the summer of 191 5 Dr. Frachtenberg continued his investi- 

 gations of the languages, traditions, history, and ethnology of the 



i'lC. 121. 



-Louis Kenoyer, the last of the 

 Atfalati. 



various tribes of Oregon and Washington. He began the year's work 

 in the month of July with a trip to the Yakima Reservation, Wash- 

 ington, where, with the assistance of Louis Kenoyer, he* revised the 

 Atfalati (Kalapuya) manuscript material which had been collected 

 by the late Dr. Gatschet in 1877. This material, comprising 421 

 manuscript pages, consisted of vocables, stems, grammatical forms, 

 and ethnological and historical narratives, obtained in the Atfalati 



