610 
as the ruins on the Gila and 
the Salinas, 11. 354. 
Casas GranpeEs of Chihuahua, their re- 
semblance to edifices of the 
Pueblo Indians of New Mexi- 
co, 11. 857-368. 
Casas Granpes River, Chihuahua, ii, 
237, 342, 347, 363. 
its bottom-lands, i. 847, 360, 
368. 
its agricultural products, il. 363. 
Carauina Island, Gulf of Cal., 1.483. 
on the Pacific coast, 11. 79. 
Cawernas Indians, small remnant of, 
on the Gila, 1. 251. 
Cayman Lake, 11. 472. 
Crq@uin, near Parras, il. 489. 
Cereus GIGANTEUS, first seen in Sonora, 
i, 416. 
for further notices of this plant 
see Petahaya. 
Crentirepes, their numbers, il. 556. 
CERALVO, town of, ii. 507. 
Crereats of California, 1. 106. 
Certs Indians of Sonora, i. 463. 
language, history, and charac- 
teristics of, i. 464, 
poisoned arrows of, 1, 465. 
Cerro Gorpo, Durango, ii. 467. 
escort furnished at, 11. 467. 
attack of Comanches on, li. 468. 
Crervis Lrewist, 1. 236. 
Cuanpier, M. 'T. W., his meteorological 
observations, 11. 541. 
CuapeoraL in ‘Texas, its character, 
Ose 
CHAPPORAL Cock, ll. 5638. 
Cuarco DE Grapo, Chihuahua, 11. 406. 
CHEMEGUABA Indians of the Colorado, 
li. 178. 
Crinuauva, its trade with San Anto- 
nio, 1. 40. 
—— approach to, 11. 421. 
—— imap and statistical report on, 
made in 1834, ll. 429. 
—— description of the city, 1. 431- 
44(), 
— its arable and timber itands, il. 
567. 
Cursuanua Docs, diminutive breed of, 
il, 440, 
CutLtt Cotorapo of Sonora, 1. 408. 
CuimNrEy Rock near Fort Yuma, iL 
159. 
Curnari, Sonora, i. 279. 
CurINeEsE in California, 11. 12. 
INDEX. 
Curpora, the Lipan Chief, i. 76-79, 
Cuiqueta, the Lipan Chief, i. 79. 
CHoLera among the Gila Indians, ii. 
241. 
CisoLo River, encampment on, i. 33. 
CIENEGA GRANDE, near Parras, ii. 489. 
CINNABAR of New Almaden, ii. 57. 
CLarkE, Epw. C., the murder of, 1.158. 
J. H., his zoological collections, 
preface viil. ; 11. 548. 
CLAViGERO, his theory of Aztec emigra- 
tion not well founded, ii. 283. 
his reference to the Casas Gran- 
des, ii. 858-362. 
Crear Lake, California, ii. 36. 
Coanpa Indians of the Colorado, iL 
178. 
Cocopa Indians of the Colorado, ii. 
179. 
Coco-Marrcopa Indians, visit from at 
Ures, i. 451. 
on the Gila, 11. 211, 213. 
—— their religious notions, ii, 221, 
222. 
—— their former range, ii. 221. 
—— their courtship and marriage, ii. 
220M 
—— their cotton manufactures, ii, 224 
—226. 
—— their pottery and basket-work, 
i. 226. 
—— their dress, 11. 228-230. 
their villages and mode of irriga- 
tion, 11. 284. 
their granaries, li. 235, 236. 
—— their wars with the Yumas, i. 
252. 
— their alliance with the Pimos, ii. 
262. 
—— their numbers, il. 263. 
—— visited by Kino in 1698, ii, 267. 
—— where found by Font in 1775, 
and by Sedelmayer in 1744, ii. 
268. 
CocosrerA, Sonora, Mission at, i. 413. 
meet French emigrants journey- 
ing to, i. 472, 
CocurARACcHI, Sonora, i. 272. 
Coretrre River, Texas, camp on, i. 19. 
—— its character, i. 21. 
Corma, Mexico, its position, 1. 494, 
its history and population, 1. 
498. 
the voleanos of, 1. 493. 
Cotonization of the English and Span- 
ish compared, 1. 299. 
