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Field Division of Education
Preliminary Report on the Ethnography of the Southwest
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BIBLIOGRAPHY

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1882a, The Zuni Social, Mythic and Religious Systems. Popular Science Monthly, 21:186-192.

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1886. A Study of Pueblo Pottery as Illustrative of Zuni Culture Growth. Bureau of American Ethnology, Report 4:467-521.

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1895. The Arrow. American Anthropologist, old series, 8:307-349.

1895, Outlines of Zuni Creation Myths. Bureau of American Ethnology, Report 13:321-447.

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1920. Zuni Breadstuff. Museum of the American Indian, Heye Foundation, Indian Notes and Monographs, 8.

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1922. Contributions to Hopi History. American Anthropologist, 24:253.

Dall, William Healy
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Donaldson, T.
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Dorsey, G. A.
1899. The Voth Collection. American Anthropologist, 1:394.

Dorsey, G. A., and H. R. Voth
1901. The Oraibi Soyal Ceremony. Field Museum of Natural History, Anthropological Papers, 3:1.

1902. The Mishongnovi Ceremonies of the Snake and Antelope Fraternities. Field Museum of Natural History, Anthropological Papers, 3:159-261.

Douglas, W. B.
1912. A World-quarter Shrine of the Tewa Indians. Records of the Past, XI, Pt. IV, pp. 159-171.

1917. Notes on the Shrines of the Tewa and other Pueblo Indians of New Mexico. 19th International Congress of Americanists, 344-378. Washington.

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1904. Mexicans and Fatalism. American Anthropologist, 6:182.

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Emery, Albert, and Cooke
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1931. American Indian Dance Steps. Barnes, New York, 3-103 pp.

Fewkes, J. W.
1890. On the Use of the Phonograph among the Zuni Indians. American Naturalist, 24:687-691.

1891. A Few Summer Ceremonials at Zuni Pueblo. Journal of the American Ethnological Association, 1:1.

1892. The Ceremonial Circuit among the Village Indians of Northeastern Arizona, Journal of American Folke Lore, 5:33-42.

1892a. A few Tusayan Pictographs. American Anthropologist, old series, 5:9.

1893. Central American Ceremony which Suggests the Snake Dance of the Tusayan Villagers. American Anthropologist, old series, 6:285.

1894. Kinship of a Tanoan-speaking Community in Tusayan. American Anthropologist, old series, 7:162-167.

1894a. Kinship of the Tusayan Villagers. American Anthropologist, old series, 7:394.

1894b. Personages who Appear in a Tusayan Ceremony. American Anthropologist, old series, 7:32.

1895. Comparison of Sia and Tusayan Snake Ceremonials. American Anthropologist, old series, 8:118.

1896. Contribution to Ethnobotany. American Anthropologist, old, series, 9:14-22.

1897. Morphology of Tusayan Altars. American Anthropologist, old series, 10:129-.

1897a. Tusayan Katcinas. Bureau of American Ethnology, Report, 15:245-213.

1897b. Tusayan Snake Ceremonies, Bureau of American Ethnology, Report, 16:267-312.

1897c. Tusayan Totemic Signatures. American Anthropologist, old series, 10:1-.

1898a. Feather Symbol in Ancient Hopi Designs. American Anthropologist, old series, 11:1-.

1898b. Winter Solstice Ceremonies at Walpi. American Anthropologist, old series, 11:65; 101-.

1899. Winter Solstice Altars at Hano Pueblo. American Anthropologist, 1:251-276.

1899a. Death of a Celebrated Hopi. American Anthropologist, 1:196.

1898b. Alosaka Cult of the Hopi Indians. American Anthropologist, 1:522-.

1900. New Fire Ceremony at Walpi. American Anthropologist, 2:80-.

1900a. Property Right in Eagles among the Hopi. American Anthropologist, 2:690-.

1900b. Tusayan Flute and Snake Ceremonies. Bureau of American Ethnology, Report 19:2:957-1011.

1900c. Tusayan Migration Traditions. Bureau of American Ethnology, Report, 19:573-633.

1901. Lesser New Fire Ceremony at Walpi. American Anthropologist, 3:438-453.

1901a. Owakulti Altar at Sichimovi Pueblo. American Anthropologist, 3:211-.

1901b. ______ Journal of American Folke Lore, 9:

1902. Minor Hopi Festivals. American Anthropologist, 4:482-.

1902a. Pueblo Settlements near El Paso, Texas. American Anthropologist, 4:57-.

1903. Hopi Katcinas, Drawn by Native Artists. Bureau of American Ethnology, 21:3-126.

1903a. Two Summers' Work in Pueblo Ruins. Bureau of American Ethnology, Report, 22:3-195.

1904. Ancient Pueblo and Mexican Water Symbol American Anthropologist, 6:535-.

1904a. Note on Hopi Clans. American Anthropologist, 6:761-762.

1906. Hopi Ceremonial Frames from Canyon de Chelly, Ariz. American Anthropologist, 3:664-.

1906a. Hopi Shrines near East Mesa, Ariz. American Anthropologist, 8:346.

1906b. Sun's Influence on the Form of Hopi Pueblos. American Anthropologist, 8:88.

1910. Butterfly in Hopi Myth and Ritual. American Anthropologist, 12:576.

1910a. ______ Records of the Past, 9:3.

1912. Antiquities of the Upper Verde River and Walnut Creek Valleys, Ariz. Bureau of American Ethnology, Report 28:181-220.

1923. Clay Figurines made by Navaho Children. American Anthropologist, 25:559-.

1923a. Fire Worship of the Hopi Indians. Smithsonian Institution, Report, 1920, 589-610.

Fewkes, J. W. and J. G. Owens
1892. Lalakonta: a Tusayan Dance. American Anthropologist, old series, 5:105-.

Fewkes, J. W. and A. M. Stephen
1892. Mamzrauti: A Tusayan Ceremony.

Fisher, A. K.

1896. A Partial List of Moki Animal Names. American Anthropologist, old series, 9:174-.

Fleming, Henry Craig
1924. Medical Observations on the Hopi Indians. Museum of the American Indian, Hehe Foundation, Contributions 7:2.

Forde, C. Daryll
1931. Ethnography of the Yuma Indians. U. C. Publications in American Archaeology and Ethnology, 28:4.

1931a. Hopi Agriculture and Land Ownership. Journal Royal Anthropological Institute, 61:357-405.

Franciscan Fathers
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1928. Pottery Making in the Southwest. University of California Publications in American Archaeology and Ethnology, 23:353-373.

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1933. The Cocopa. University of California Publications in American Archaeology and Ethnology, 31:5.

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1908. Hopi Songs. Journal of American Ethnology and Archaeology, 5.

Goddard, P. E.
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1920. The Cultural and Somatic Correlations of Uto-Aztekan. American Anthropologist, 22:244-247.

Goldfrank, Esther Schiff
1923. Notes on Two Pueblo Feasts. American Anthropologist, 25:188.

1927. The Social and Ceremonial Organization of Cochiti. American Anthropologist, Memoirs, 33.

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1908. A Yuma. Account of Origins. Journal of American Folke Lore, 21:324-348.

1909. Notes on the Piro Language. American Anthropologist, 11:563.

1910. Brief Description of the Tewa Languages. American Anthropologist, 12:497.

1910a. "Butterfly" in Southwestern Languages. American Anthropologist, 12:344.

1910b. Introductory Paper on the Tewa Language, Dialect of Taos, New Mexico. American Anthropologist, 12:11.

1910c. On Phonetic and Lexical Resemblances between Kiown and Tanoan, Santa Fe, N. M. Archaeological Inst. of America, Papers, 12:-Also, American Anthropologist, 12:119.

1911. Key to the Navaho Orthography Employed by the Franciscan Fathers. American Anthropologist, 13:164.

1911a. Numerals "two" and "three" in certain Indian Languages of the Southwest. American Anthropologist, 13:167.

1911b. The Origin of the Names Ute and Paiute. American Anthropologist, 13:173-174.

1911c. The Phonetic System of the Ute Language. School of American Archaeology, papers, 24:199-222.

1912. Tewa Indian Game of "Canute". American Anthropologist, 14:243.

1912a. Tewa Relationship Terms. American Anthropologist, 14:472-498.

1914. Ethno-zoology of the Tewa Indians. Bureau of American Ethnology, Bull. 56.

1916. The Ethnogeography of the Tewa Indians. Bureau of American Ethnology, Report, 29:29-618.

1920. Old Indian Geographical Names around Santa Fe, New Mexico. American Anthropologist, 22:341-359.

Harrington, J. P. and Helen H. Roberts
1928. Picuris Children's Stories with Texts and Songs. Bureau of American Ethnology, Report, 43:289-447.

Hawley, Florence
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Hertzog, C.
1928. The Yuman Musical Style. Journal of American Folke Lore, 41:183-21.

Hewett, Edgar L.
1904. Studies on the Extinct Pueblo of Pecos. American Anthropologist, 6:426-439. M.

1906. Origin of the name Navaho. American Anthropologist, 9:233.

1932. Ancient Life in the American Southwest. Bobbs, Merrill: Indianapolis, 392 pp.

Hewett, E. L. J. Henderson, and W. W. Robbins
1913. The Physiography of the Rio Grande Valley, New Mexico, in Relation to Pueblo Culture. Bureau of American M. Ethnology, Bull. 54.

Hewitt, J. N. B. H.
1898. Comparative Lexicology. Bureau of American Ethnology, Report, 17:1.

Hodge, F. W.
1890. Zuni Foot Race. American Anthropologist, old series, 3:227.

1891. Laguna Indian Villages. American Anthropologist, old series, 4:345.

1895a. First Discovered City of Cibola. American Anthropologist, old series, 8:142.

1896. Pueblo Indian Clans. American Anthropologist, old series, 9:345-352.

1896a. Pueblo Snake Ceremonials. American Anthropologist, old. series, 9:133.

1897. The Verification of a Tradition. American Anthropologist, old series, 10:299-302.

Hodge, F. W.
1904. Hopi Pottery Fired with Coal. American Anthropologist, 6:581.

Holmes, W. H.
1886. Pottery of the Ancient Pueblos. Bureau of American Ethnology, Report, 4:257-360.

1887. A Study of the Textile Art in its Relation to the Development of Form and Ornament. Bureau of American Ethnology, Report, 6:189-252.

Hoom-o-thy-a, or Mike Burns
1927. The Legend of Superstition Mountain. Published by A. Truman Helin, Phoenix, Arizona.

Hoover, J. W.
1929. The Indian Country of Southern Arizona. Geographical. Review, January, 1929.

Hough, Walter
1897. Hopi in Relation to their Plant Environment. American Anthropologist, old series, 10:33.

1897a. Music of the Hopi Flute Ceremony. American Anthropologist, old series, 10:162.

1897b. Stone Working at Tewa. American Anthropologist, old series, 10:191.

1898. Environmental Interrelations in Arizona. American Anthropologist, old series, 11:133.

1898a. The Moki Snake Dance. Chicago.

1915. Hopi Indians. Little Histories of the North American Indians, 4. Cedar Rapids, Iowa.

1917. The Sic Shalako at the First Mesa, July 9, 1916. American Anthropologist, 19:410-458.

1917a. Revival of the Ancient Hopi Pottery Art. American Anthropologist, 19:322.

Hough, Walter
1918. Hopi Collection in the U. S. National Museum. U. S. National Museum Proceedings, 54:285-296.

Hrdlicka, Ales
1900. Physical and Physiological Observations on the Navaho. American Anthropologist, 2:339.

1903. Laguna Ceremonial Language. American Anthropologist, 5:730.

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1916. Speech of a Zuni Child. American Anthropologist, 18:529

1918. Pueblo Traditions and Clans. American Anthropologist, 20:328.

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Lewton, L.
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Lipps, Oscar H.
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1894a. Songs of Sequence of the Navajos. Journal of American Folk Lore, 7:185-194.

1896. Vigil of the Gods-a Navaho Ceremony. American Anthropologist, old series, 9:50.

1897. Navaho Legends. Journal of American Folk Lore, Memoirs, 5.

1898. Ichthyophobia. Journal of American Folk Lore, 2:105-112.

1900. Two-faced Navaho Blanket. American Anthropologist, 2:638.

1902. Night Chant: A Navaho Ceremony. American Museum of Natural History, Memoirs, 6.

1904. Navajo Yellow Dye. American Anthropologist, 6:194.

1904a. Note on Navaho Tribes. American Anthropologist, 6:758-759.

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1898. Preliminary Study of the Pueblo of Taos. Chicago.

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1897. The Cliff-ruins of Canyon de Chelly, Ariz. Bureau of American Ethnology, Report 16:73-193.

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1916b. The Zuni Adoshle and Sunke. American Anthropologist, 18:338-347.

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1919a. Increase by Magic: A Zuni Pattern. American Anthropologist, 21:279.

1919b. Mothers and Children at Laguna. Man, 19:37-.

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1920b. Spanish Tales from Laguna and Zuni, New Mexico. Journal of American Folk Lore, 33:127-.

1921. Further notes on Isleta. American Anthropologist, 23:149-169.

1921a. Hopi Mothers and Children. Man, 21:98-104.

1921b. Note on the Night Chant at Twelchedu. American Anthropologist, 23:240.

1922a. Hidden Ball on First Mesa, Arizona. Man, 22:89-91.

1922b. Oraibi in 1920. American Anthropo1ogist, 24:283-294.

1922c. Winter and Summer Dance Series in Zuni in 1918. U. C. Publ. in American Archaeology and Ethnology, 17:171-216.

1923. Fiesta at Santa Ana. Scientific Monthly, 16:177-183.

1923a. The Hopi Buffalo Dance. Man, 23:21-26.

1923b. Hopi Wowochin Ceremony in 1920, American Anthropo1ogist, 25:156.

1923c. Laguna Genealogies. American Museum of Natural History, Anthropological Papers 19:135-292.

1923d. Notes on San Felipe and Santo Domingo. American Anthropologist, 25:485-494.

1923e. Origin Myth of Zuni. Journal of American Folk Lore, 36:161.

1923f. Zuni Names and Naming Practices. Journal of American Folk Lore, 36:171-176.

1924. The Religion of the Pueblo Indians. 21st International Congress of Americanists, 140-161. The Hague.

1924a. The Scalp Ceremonial of Zuni. American Anthropologist, Memoirs, 31.

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1926. Ceremonial Calendar of the Tewa of Arizona. American Anthropologist, 28:211-229.

1926a. Tewa Tales. American Folk Lore Soc. Mem. 19.

1927. Ceremonial Tewa du Nouveau Mexique et en Arizona. Journal of the Society of Americanists of Paris, n. s., 18L 9-14.

1927a. Witchcraft among the Pueblos: Indian or Spanish. Man, 27:106-112; 125-128.

1928. The Laguna Migration to Isleta. American Anthropologist, 30:602-613.

1928b. Spanish Elements in the Kachina Cult of the Pueblos. 23d International Congress of Americanists, 582-603.

1929. Kiowa Tales. American Folk Lore Soc. Mem. 22.

1929a. Ritual Parallels in Pueblo and Plains Culture with Special Reference to the Pawnee. American Anthropologist, 31:642-654.

1929b. Social Organization of the Tewa of New Mexico. American Anthropo1ogist, Mem. 36.

1930. Zuni Tales. Journal of American Folk Lore, 43:1-58.

1932. Isleta, New Mexico. Bureau of American Ethnology, Report 47:193-466.

1932a. The Kinship Nomenclature of the Pueblo Indians. American Anthropologist, 34:377.

1933a. Some Aztec and Pueblo parallels. American Anthropologist, 36:611-631.

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SELECTED BIBLIOGRAPHY

General

P. E. Goddard: Indians of the Southwest (Amer. Mus. Nat. Hist., Handbook Series)
A. V. Kidder: Introduction to Archaeology of the southwest (New Haven, 1924)
G. A. Dorsey: Indians of the Southwest (no date)
E. Huntington: The Climatic Factor as Illustrated in Arid America (Publ. Carnegie Inst.

Hopi

E. and P. Beaglehole: Hopi of the Second Mesa (MAAA, 44, 1935) of Wash., 192)
W. Hough: The Hopi Indiana (Ceder Rapids, Iowa, 1915)
W. Hough: Hopi Indian Collection in US National Museum (PUSNM, 54, 1918, 235-96)
H. R. Voth: Oraibi Powamu Ceremony (PFM, 3, 60-158)
H. R. Voth: Oraibi Natal Customs and Ceremonies (PFM, 6, 47-61)
J. W. Fewkes: Tusayan Flute and Snake Ceremonies (ARBAE, 19, 1900, pt. 2)
R. H. Lowie: Notes on Hopi Clans (APAMNH, 30, pt. 6, 1929)
R. H. Lowie: Hopi Kinship (APAMNH, 30, pt. 7, 1929)
E. Beaglehole: Hopi Hunting and Hunting Ritual (YUPA. 4, 1936)
E. Beaglehole: Notes on Hopi Economic Life (YUPA, 15, 1936)

Zuni

M. C. Stevenson: The Zuni Indians (ARBAE, 23, 1904)
A. L. Kroeber: Zuni Kin and Clan (APAMNH, 18, pt. 2, 1917)
R. Bunzel: Introduction to Zuni Ceremonialism (ARBAE, 47, 1932, 467-544)
R. Bunzel: Zuni Ritual Poetry (ARBAE, 47, 1932, 611-835)
F. H. Cushing: Zuni Breadstuff (Indian Notes and Monographs, 8, 1920)
F. H. Cushing: Zuni Folk Tales (1901)
R. Benedict: Zuni Folk Tales (CUCA, 21, 1935)

Acoma

L. A. White: Summary Rept. of Field Work at Acoma (AA, 30, 1928, 559-68)
L. A. White: The Acoma Indians (ARBAE, 47, 1932, 17-192)

Laguna

E. C. Parsons: Laguna Genealogies (APAMNH, 19, 135-292)
E. C. Parsons: Notes on Ceremonialism at Laguna (APAMNH, 19, 85-121)
F. Boas: Keresan Torts (PAES, 8, 1928, 2 pts.)

Cochiti

N. Dumarest: Notes on Cochiti, N. M. (MAAA, 6, pt. 3, 1919)
E. S. Goldfrank: Social and Ceremonial Organization of Cochiti (MAAA, 33, 1927)

San Felipe

L. A. White: The Pueblo of San Felipe (MAAA, 38, 1932)

Isleta

E. C. Parsons: Isleta, New Mexico (ARBAE, 47, 1932, 193-466)

Sia

M. C. Stevenson: The Sia (ARBAE, U, 1889)

Jemez

E. C. Parsons: Pueblo of Jemez (New Haven, 1925)

Tewa

J. P. Harrington: Ethnogeography of Tewa Indiana (ARBAE, 29, 1916)
E. C. Parsons: Social Organization of the Tewa of New Mexico (MAAA, 36, 1929)

Taos

E. C. Parsons: Taos Pueblo (General Series in Anthropology, 2, 1936)

General Pueblo

James Stevenson: Illus. Catalogue of Collection Obtained from Indians of N. M. and Arizona in 1879 (ARBAE, 2, 1883, 319-422)

Navaho

Franciscan Fathers: Ethnologic Dictionary of the Navaho Language (1910)
C. Mindeleff: Navaho Houses (ARBAE, 17, 1898, pt. 2, 469-518)
R. W. Shufeldt: The Navaho Tanner (PUSNM, 11, 1888, 59-66)
A. M. Stephen: The Navajo Shoemaker (PUSNM, 11, 1888, 131-33)
G. A. Reichard: Social Life of the Navajo Indians (CUCA, 7, 1928)
W. Matthews: Songs of Sequence of the Navajos (JAIL, 7, 1894, 185-94)
W. Matthews: Navaho Legends (MAILS, 5, 1897)
W. Matthews: The Night Chant, a Navaho Ceremony (Men. AMNH., 6, 1902)
W. Matthews: The Mountain Chant (ARBAE, 5, 1887)
F. W. Hodge: The Early Navajo and Apache (AA, 8, 1895, 223-40)
W. W. Hill: Navaho Warfare (YUPA, 5, 1936)
Leland C. Wyman: Navaho Diagnosticians (AA, 38, 1936, 236-46)

Jicarilla

James Mooney: A Jicarilla Genesis (AA, 11, 1898, 197-209)
P. E. Goddard: Jicarilla Apache Texts (APAMNH, 8, 1911)
M. E. Opler: Summary of Jicarilla Culture (AA, 38, 1936, 202-23)

Mescalero

M. E. Opler: Kinship Systems of the Southern Athbaskan-speaking Tribes (AA, 38, 1936)
M. E. Opler: The Concept of Supernatural Power Among the Chiricahua and Mescalero Apaches (AA, 37, 1935, 65-70)

Western Apache

A. B. Reagan: Notes on Indians of the Fort Apache Region (APAMNH, 31, pt. 5, 1930)
John G. Bourke: Notes upon the Religion of the Apache Indians (Folk-Lore, 2, 1891, 419-55)
John G. Bourke: Medicine-Men of the Apache (ARBAE, 9, 1892, 451-603)
P. E. Goddard: Myths and Tales of the San Carlos Apache (APAMNH, 24, 1918)
P. E. Goddard: Myths and Tales of the White Mountain Apache (APAMNH, 24, 1919)
G. Goodwin: The Social Divisions and Economic Life of the Western Apache (AA, 37,1935, 55-64)

Southern Paiute

R. H. Lowie: Notes on Shoshonean Ethnography (APAMNH, 20, 1935, pt. 3)
E. Sapir: Song Recitative in Paiute Mythology (JAIL, 23, 1910, 455-72)
I. Kelly: Southern Paiute Bands (AA, 36, 1934, 548-60)

Walapai

A. L. Kroeber, ed., Walapai Ethnography (MAAA, 42, 1935)

Havasupai

L. Spier: Havasupai Ethnography (APAMNH, 29, 1928, pt. 3)
F. H. Cushing: The Nation of the Willows (Atlantic Monthly. 50, 1882, 362-74, 541-59)

Yavapai

E. W. Gifford: The Southeastern Yavapai (UCPAAE, 29, 1932, no. 3)
Wm. F. Corbusier: The Apache-Yumas and Apache-Mojaves (Amer. Antiquarian, 8, 1886, 276-84, 325-39)

Pima

E. C. Parsons: Notes on the Pima, 1926 (AA, 30, 1928, 445-64)
F. Russell: The Pima Indiana (ARBAE, 26, 1904)
J. Wm. Lloyd: Aw-aw-tam Indian Nights (Westfield, N. J., 1911)

Papago

C. Lumholtz: New Trails in Mexico (New York, 1912)
J. A. Mason: Papago Harvest Festival (AA, 22, 1920, 13-25)
E. H. Davis: Papago Ceremony of the Vikita (Indian Notes and Monographs, 2, 1920, 4)
Ruth Underhill, Autobiography of a Papago Woman (MAAA, 46, 1936)

Maricopa

L. Spier: Yuman Tribes of the Gila River (Univ. Chicago Publ. Anth.: Ethnol. Series, 1933)

Mohave

A. L. Kroeber: Handbook Indians of California (BBAE, 78, 1925, ch. 50 & 51)
A. L. Kroeber: Yuman Tribes of the Colorado River (UCPAAE, 16, 1920, 475-85)

Yuma

C. D. Fords: Ethnography of the Yuma Indians (UCPAAE, 28, 1931, no. 4.)
J. P. Harrington: A Yuma Account of Origins (JAIL, 21, 1908, 324-48)
A. L. Kroeber: Handbook Indians of California (BBAE, 78, 1925, ch. 52)

Cocopa

E. W. Gifford: The Cocopa (UCPAAE, 31, 1933, no. 5.)

Kamia

E. W. Gifford: The Kamia of Imperial Valley (BBAE, 97, 1931)

Southern California

W. D. Strong: Aboriginal Society in So. Calif. (UCPAAE, 26, 1929)
A. L. Kroeber: Handbook Indians of California (BBAE, 78, 1925, ch. 37-49)

Comparative

L. Spier: Havasupai Ethnography (APAMNH, 29, 1928, pt. 3)
R. L. Reals: Comparative Ethnology of Northern Mexico before 1750 (Ibero-Americana, 2, 1932)
L. Spier: Problems Arising from the Cultural Position of the Havasupai (AA, 31, 1929, 213-22)
A. L. Kroeber: Native Culture in the Southwest (UCPAAE, 23, 1928, no. 9.) 345-49)
R. Linton: The Significance of Certain Traits in North American Maize Culture (AA, 26, 1924,
L. Spier: Cultural Relations of the Gila River and Lower Colorado Tribes (YUPA, 3, 1936)
A. L. Kroeber: The Seri (Southwest Museum Papers, 6, 1931)
H. K. Haeberlin: Idea of Fertilization in the Culture of the Pueblo Indians (MAAA, 3, 1916, no. 1.)

Houses

V. Mindeleff: A Study of Pueblo Architecture (ARBAE, 8, 1891)
C. Mindeleff: Navaho Houses (ARBAE, 17, 1898, pt. 2, 469-518)

Agriculture

C. D. Forde: Hopi Agriculture (Journal, Royal Anth. Institute, 61, 1931, 357-405)
F. H. Cushing: Zuni Breadstuff (Indian Notes and Monographs, 8, 1920)

Pottery

C. E. Guthe: Pueblo Pottery Making [San Ildefonso] (1925)
R. Bunzel: The Pueblo Potter [Zuni] (CUCA, 8, 1929)
E. W. Gifford: Pottery Making in the Southwest (UCPAAE, 23, 1928, no. 8.)
M. Rogers: Yuman Pottery-Making (San Diego Museum Papers, 2, 1936)

Basketry

M. L. Kissell: Basketry of the Papago and Pima (APAMNH, 17, 115-264)
H. H. Roberts: Basketry of the San Carlos Apache (APAMNH, 31, 1929, pt. 2)
O. T. Mason: Aboriginal American Basketry (Rept. US National Museum for 1902, 1904, 171-548)

Weaving

W. Matthews: Navajo Weavers (ARBAE, 3, 1884, 371-92)
L. Spier: Zuni Weaving Technique (AA, 26, 1924, 64-85)
C. A. Amsden: Navaho Weaving (Santa Ana, Calif., 1934)

Social Organization

E. C. Parsons: Tewa Kin, Clan and Moiety (AA, 26, 1924, 333-39)
W. D. Strong: An Analysis of Southwestern Society (AA, 29, 1927, 1-61) 1925. no. 2.)
L. Spier: Distribution of Kinship Systems in North America (Univ. Wash. Publ. Anth., l,
E. W. Gifford: Clans and Moieties in Southern California (UCPAAE, 14, 1918, no. 2.)

Music

G. Herzog: The Yuman Musical Style (JAIL, 41, 1928, 185-231)
F. Denenore: Papago Music (BBAE, 90, 1929)
W. Matthews: Navaho Legends (MAILS, 5, 1897, 254-58, 281-90)
G. Herzog in Spier: Yuman Tribes of the Gila River (1933, 270 f.)

Ceremonial

E. C. Parsons: Hopi and Zuni Ceremonialism (MAAA, 39, 1933)
E. C. Parsons: Pueblo Religion (in preparation)


Abbreviations:

AAAmerican Anthropologist
ARBAEAnnual Report, Bureau of American Ethnology
APAMNHAnthropological Papers, American Museum of Natural History
BBAEBulletin, Bureau of American Ethnology
CUCAColumbia University Contributions to Anthropology
JAILJournal of American Folk-Lore
MAAAMemoirs, American Anthropological Association
MAILSMemoirs, American Folk-Lore Society
PAESPublications, American Ethnological Society
PFMPublications, Field Museum of Natural History (Anthropological Series)
PUSMProceedings, United States National Museum
UCPAAEUniversity California Publications in American Archaeology and Ethnology
YUPAYale University Publications in Anthropology


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