the places where the Aztecks made some abode, 
and the towns they built. Tocolco and Oztotlan 
(No. 3 and 4), humiliation and the place of grot- 
toes; Mizquiahuala (No. 5), denoted by a mimosa 
bearing fruit placed near a teocalli ; Teotzapot- 
lan (No. 11), place of divine fruits ; Ilhuicate- 
pec (No. 12) ; Papantla (No. 13), herb with 
broad leaves ; Tzompango (No. 14), place of 
human hones; Apazco (No. 15), vessel of clay ; 
Atlicalaguian (a little abbve the preceding hiero- 
glyphic), a crevice in which a rivulet disappears ; 
Quauhtitlan (No. 16), a thichet inhabited by an 
eagle; Atzcapozalco (No. 17), an anfs nest; 
Chaleo (No. 18), place of precious stones ; Pan- 
titlan (No. 19), place of spinning ; Tolpetlac 
(No. 20), mats of rushes ; Quauhtepec (No. 9), 
the eagles mountain^ from quauhtli^ an eagle, 
and tepee (in Turkish tepe) a mountain ; Tete- 
/ . panco (No. 8), a wall composed of several small 
stones ; Chicomoztoc (No. 7), the seven grottoes ; 
Huitzquilocan (No. 6), place of thistles ; Xalte- 
pozauhean (No. ^2), place from which sand is 
extracted; Cozcaquauheo (No. 33), name of a 
vulture ; Techcatitlan (No. 31), place of obsidian 
mirrors; Azcaxochitl (No. flower of the ant; 
Tepetlapan (No. 23), place where is found the 
tepelate^ a clayey breccia, which contains amphi- 
bole, vitreous feldspar, and pumice stone ; Apan 
(No. 32), place of water ; Teozomaco (No. 24), 
place of the divine monkey; Chopoltepec (No. 25), 
F 2 
