VOLUMES XIII AND XIV. 



^87 



Courier. See Postman. 



Coxcox, the Noah of the Mexican Nations, xiii, 144, 340 ; 

 Painting- in which he is represented floating on the 

 Water in the Trunk of a Tree, xiv, 23 ; how he 

 saved himself from the Deluge, 64 ; sends out suc- 

 cessively several Birds to learn whether the Waters 

 had retired, 65 ; represented in Old Age on the Az- 

 teck Paintings, 84. 



Coyote, the Mexican Wolf, xiv, 48. 



Cozcapetlatl, a Necklace of Pearls, xiii, 203. 



Cozcaquauhtli, Name of the Fourteenth Day of the Month 

 among the Mexicans, xiii, 313. 



Cozehuatl, Mexican Half-boots, xiii, 203. 



Creations of Men, the Azteck Mythology admits Five, xiv, 

 17. 



Crocodiles represented on the Monument of Xochicalco, 

 xiii, 111. 



Cuello, River, xiii, 69. 



Cuernavaca, a City of Anahuac, xiii, 108. 



Cuesta, el Pie de la, a place at the entrance of the Moun- 

 tain of Quindiu, xiii, 69. 



Cuetzpalin, Name of the Second Day of a Period of the 

 Mexican Calendar, xiii, 813. 



Cuitlahuatzin, Tenth King of the Aztecks, xiv, 252. 



Cuitlalteeks, first Inhabitants of the elevated Plains of Ana- 

 huac, xiii, 208, 214. 



Copper mixed with Tin, employed for making Tools by the 

 Peruvians, xiii, 260 ; and by the Mexicans, 268, 

 269. 



Culebra, Camino tie, a Path leading to the Foot of the 



Cascade of Tequendama, xiii, 80. 

 Cundinamarca, a Kingdom founded by Huneahua, xiv, 



108. 



Cutaco, Crevice of, its Depth, xiii, 54. 



