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CONTENTS
xi
Page | |
CHAPTER XXI | |
New World Origins | 355 |
APPENDIX | |
Linguistic Tables and Bibliography | 367 |
Linguistic Stocks of the United States and Canada | 369 |
Linguistic Stocks of Mexico and Central America | 378 |
Linguistic Stocks of South America | 381 |
Bibliography | 387 |
Index | 413 |
LIST OF ILLUSTRATIONS
Ruin known as the 'House of the Magician' | Frontispiece |
1. Food Areas of the New World | 8 |
2. Cree Indians Driving Bison | 11 |
3. Patagonians Hunting the Guanaco | 13 |
4. Iroquois Woman Pounding Maize into Meal | 19 |
5. The Distribution of Maize and Manioc | 24 |
6. Pueblo Indian Planting Maize | 26 |
7. Cultivating Maize and Squashes | 26 |
8. Distribution of Coca and Tobacco | 29 |
9. Distribution of Animal Transport | 33 |
10. Eskimo Dog Sledge | 36 |
11. Indians of the Bison Area on the March | 36 |
12. Various Methods of Using the Tumpline | 40 |
13. Types of Canoes | 42 |
14. Ancient Mexican and Egyptian Spinners | 48 |
15. Navajo Woman Spinning | 48 |
16. Basketry Weaves | 51 |
17. Distribution of Types of Basketry | 53 |
18. Ojibway Weaving Frame | 56 |
19. A Navajo Weaver | 56 |
20. Distribution of Weaving | 57 |
21. Cape of Sagebrush Bark | 59 |
22. Peruvian Feather Poncho | 61 |
23. Types of Costume and their Distribution | 62 |
24. Forms of Footwear | 64 |
25. A Pueblo Indian Potter | 67 |
26. Distribution of Pottery | 68 |
27. Lower Mississippi Pottery | 70 |
28. South Atlantic Pottery | 70 |
29. North Atlantic Pottery | 71 |
30. Pottery from Southwestern United States | 72 |
31. Mexican Pottery | 72 |
32. Central American Pottery | 73 |