0,60 
INDEX OF THE 
('ie^a (Piedro de) de Leon. Chronicle of Pern. His des- 
cription of the eruption of the Cotopaxi, xiti, 1*23; 
details which he gives concerning the houses of the 
Incas, xiii, 243, 244, 257, 258 ; xiv, 6, 9, 131. 
Cisneros. Peruvian Mercury, xiii, 175. 
Clavigero. History of Mexico, xiii, 4, 94, 170, 182, 
185, 219, 387, 389 ; xiv, 18, 59, 68, 172, 249, 
251, 252. 
Clement (Saint), of Alexandria. Stromata. On the in- 
scription of Thebes, xiii, 158. 
Codex anonymus Vaticanus, 3738. See Rios (Pedro de 
los). 
Colebrooke. On the astronomy of the Hindoos, xiii, 333, 
356. 
Cortez. Letters to the Emperor Charles V. What he 
says of Cholula, xiii, 88 ; his conversation with 
Montezuma on the origin of the Aztecks, 95 ; his 
description of the Teocallis, 99. 
Court-de-Gebelin. Primitive World. He pretends there 
are Phenician inscriptions extant in America, xiii, 
133, 134, 152. 
Creuxius. History of Canada, xiv, 254. 
Ctesias. What he relates of the tumulus of Ninus, xiv, 102. 
Cuvier. Lectures on comparative Anatomy. Observations 
on the frontal bone of the Mexicans, xiii, 132 j 
Memoir on the Bones of Mastodonontes and fossil 
Elephants, xiv, 21, 
/ 
D. 
Daniel. Oriental Scenery. His description of the Pagoda 
ofTanjore, xiiij 103. 
Davis, On the Cycle of sixty years, xiii, 336. 
I 
