Page:The American Indian.djvu/484

From Wikisource
Jump to navigation Jump to search
This page has been validated.
418
THE AMERICAN INDIAN
Coiled, basketry, distribution, 52, 54; pottery, Pueblo area, 257; technique, 80-81
Collars, stone, in the Antilles, 121
Colombia, archæological characterization of, 264-265
Colonnades, common, in Mexican houses, 100
Colonization, Spanish, changes caused by, 12, 37, 233; realism in textile art due to, 90
Color sequences, in Peruvian designs, 92
Columbia area, 275
Columbia Basin, archæological characterization of, 259-260
Communal, character of land system, 173-174; concept, foundation of agricultural concept, 174
Communistic government, 149
Complex, cotton, unity in the New World, 49; horse-riding, 38; maize, unity in New World, 49
Confession, conventional, Inca area, 232; of sins, distribution of, 201
Conventionalization, in design, 85
Convergence, in culture, theory of, 344
Copper, aboriginal workings of, 253-254; knives, 121; Lake Superior, 125; mining, 124; tools, 124-125, 228; work in, North Pacific Coast, 214
Cortez, 113, 227, 229, 272
Costume, bison area, 64; distribution and types in the Old World, 63-65; tailored, 61-63
Cotton, armor of, 131-132; culture, distribution of, 46; raised in South America, 56; unity of New World complex, 49
Couvade, in South America, 182
Cranes, domestication of, 32
"Crane Bridge," distribution of story, 196
Creation, in mythology, 195
Crests, North Pacific Coast tribes, 214
Crime, compounding of, 168; punishment for, 166-170
Crô-Magnon man, 317-318, 319
Crops, aboriginal, in North America,
Cross-cousin marriage, 176
Cults, Mazateca, 182; shamanistic, 189
Cultural classification, correlated with archæological classification, 328-331, 334
Culture, Amazon area, 240; American, independent development of, 17; of the Antilles, 267; anthropological conception of, 204; areas close agreement with archæological areas, 334; areas, North America, 206-229; areas, outlined, 205; areas, South America, 229-242; areas, superposition of, 330; center, Mississippi-Ohio area, 252, 253; centers, 242-244,328, 329; centers of highest, 202, 361, 362; centers, origin of, 339; centers, Peru, 266; centers, stability of, 339; changes shown in shell-heaps, 275; chronology of, 270-279; classification of social groups according to, 204-244; classifications, historic and prehistoric, 328; Columbia Basin, 259; common traits in New and Old Worlds, 358; complexes, elements constituting, 353; by conquest, 150; contrasts in Inca area, 231; correlated with political organization, 243; correlation between elevations and variations in, 335-336; correspondences between Old and New Worlds, 356, 360; correspondences between Pueblo and Diaguite, 266; differences in Amazon area, 240; differentiation of, a historical phenomena, 355; diffusion, 77; evidence of early in New Jersey, 248; fundamental differences in New and Old Worlds, 1; fundamentals of Old World, 357; general relations with linguistics and somatology, 334; grouping, 282; grouping, correlated with language grouping, 332; guanaco area, 233; hero, in mythology, 195; hero, Peruvian, 180; hero trickster, wide diffusion of concept, 199; historical