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APPENDIX. 
A LIST OF WORKS RELATING TO CENTRAL 
AMERICA. 
A fall bibliography of works that contain information about 
the region through which we have been travelling together would 
fill a volume much larger than the present; but the following 
brief list of some of the more important titles may aid those who 
are interested in the past history or the future prospects of the 
tropical part of this continent. I have not thought it worth 
while to mention those unprinted works not at present acces¬ 
sible to the public, nor the ephemeral publications of simple 
tourists : — 
Acosta, Fr. Jose de. Historia natural y moral de las Indias. Se¬ 
villa, 1590. 
Adam, Lucien. Etudes sur six Langues Americaines, Paris, 1878. 
-Du parler des Homines et clu parler des Femmes. Paris, 1879. 
Alcedo, Antonio de. Diccionario geografieo-historico de las Indias 
occidentales 6 America ; es a saber; de los reynos del Peru, Nueva 
Espana, Tierra Firme, Chile y Nuevo Reyno de Granada. Madrid, 
1786-89. 5 vols. An English Translation, with Additions, by 
G. A. Thompson, was published in London, 1812-15. 5 vols. 
Ancona, Eligio. Historia de Yucatan. Merida, 1878. 
Andagoya, Pascual de, Narrative of. Translated by C. R. Mark¬ 
ham. Hakluyt Soc. London, 1865. 
Astaburuaga, Francisco S. Repiiblicas de Centro-America o Idea 
de su Historia i de su Estado actual. Santiago, Chili, 1837. 
Baily, John. Central America; describing each of the States of 
Guatemala, Honduras, Salvador, Nicaragua, and Costa Rica. Lon¬ 
don, 1850. 
Baldwin, John D. Ancient America, in notes on American Archae¬ 
ology. New York, 1872. 
Bancroft, Hubert H. Native Races of the Pacific States of North 
America. San Francisco, 1875 et seq. 
Barcia, Andres Gonzales. Historiadores primitives de las Indias 
occidentales, que junto, traduxo en parte y saco a luz, ilustrados 
con eruditas notas y copiosos indices el Senor Don Andres Gonzales 
Barcia, del Consejo y Camera de Su Majestacl. Madrid, aiio 
1749. 
