INDEX TO TITLES
Aborigines of Porto Rico, [19]
Abyla pentagona, tubes in larger nectocalyx of, [5]
Acalephæ collected by the “Albatross”, [7]
Acalephæ of coast of New England, [6]
Acalephæ, report on, [5]
Acalephs and Polyps, [6]
Acalephs from the Tortugas, [6]
Actinozoa, [7]
Adobes in cliff-dwellings, [20]
Agalma, development of, [7]
Alaurina in New England waters, [6]
Alaurina prolifera Busch., [6]
Alósaka cult of the Hopi, [17]
Altar, Owakülti, at Sichomovi, [17]
Altars, winter solstice, at Hano, [16]
American Association, report of meeting of, [17]
Amphiura, calcareous plates of, [8]
Amphiura, new parasite of, [10]
Amulets, precolumbian West Indian, [18]
Ancient megalith in Jalapa, Vera Cruz, [19]
Ancient Pueblo and Mexican water symbol, [19]
Ancient Zuñi pottery, [20]
Angelopsis, relationship to Siphonophora, [10]
Animal figures on Mimbres Valley pottery, [23]
Annelid messmates with a coral, [6]
Anthropology, [15]
Antillean statuette, [20]
Antilles, engraved celts from, [23]
Antiquities of eastern Mexico, [19]
Antiquities of Mesa Verde National Park, [20], [21]
Antiquities of upper Verde and Walnut Creek, [21]
Antiquities of the West Indies, [22]
Arbacia, development of pluteus of, [5]
Archæological expedition to Arizona in 1895, [17]
Archæological investigations in New Mexico, Colorado and Utah, [24]
Archæological trip to West Indies, [18]
Archæological work in Mesa Verde National Park, [24]
Archæology of Barbados, [23]
Archæology of lower Mimbres Valley, [22]
Archæology of Porto Rico, [20]
Arizona Indians, ceremonial circuit among, [12]
Arizona ruins which should be preserved, [19]
Ascorhiza occidentalis, [10]
Asterias, calcareous plates of, [8]
Astrangia danæ, anatomy of, [9]
Athorybia, a new, [10]
Austrian folk-religion, figurines in, [17]
A-wa′-to-bi, a Tusayan legend, [13]
Awatobi, ruins of, [15]
Bandelier collection of documents, [14]
Barbados, archæology of, [23]
Basket dances, Hopi, [16]
Bay of Fundy, surface fauna of, [9]
Bermudas, origin of form of, [9]
Bermudas, origin of outlines of, [10]
Bibliography, [6]
Book reviews, [17]
Brittany, a corner of, [9]
Brittle-starfish, parasite of, [9]
Bryozoon, stalked, [10]
Bureau of American Ethnology, report on, [25]
Butterfly in Hopi myth and ritual, [20]
Cacimbas of the Isle of Pines, [21]
Cardinal points of Tusayan villagers, [13]
Caribbean, vanished races of, [22]
Casa Grande, Arizona, [21]
Casa Grande, condition of ruin, [12]
Casa Grande, excavations at, in 1906-07, [19]
Castles and towers of the Hovenweep, [26]
Cave dwellings of Old and New Worlds, [20]
Celts, engraved, from the Antilles, [23]
Central American ceremony, [13]
Cercaria with caudal setæ, [5]
Ceremonial circuit among village Indians of Arizona, [12]
Ceremonial circuit of cardinal points among Tusayan Indians, [12]
Ceremonials, Sia and Tusayan Snake, [14]
Ceremonials, summer, at Tusayan pueblos, [12]
Ceremonials, summer, at Zuñi and Moqui pueblos, [11]
Ceremonials, summer, at Zuñi pueblo, [11]
Ceremonials, Snake, at Walpi, [13]
Ceremonies, annual, at Walpi, [14]
Ceremonies, Tusayan Flute and Snake, [17]
Ceremonies, Tusayan Snake, [15]
Ceremony, Central American, [13]
Ceremony, New-fire, at Walpi, [17]
Ceremony, religious, of the Hopi, [24]
Ceremony, Tusayan, personages in, [13]
Ceremony, Tusayan, the Pá-lü-lü-koñ-ti, [13]
Ceremony, Walpi winter solstice, [16]
Clams, fresh-water, transported by ducks, [7]
Cliff-dwellings, cremation in, [20]
Cliff-dwellings, occurrence of adobes in, [20]
Cliff Palace, antiquities of the Mesa Verde, [21]
Cliff Palace, excavation and repair of, [21]
Cliff-ruins in Arizona, [14]
Cliff-ruins in Fewkes Cañon, [23]
Cliff villages of Red Rock country, [15]
Climate and cult, [19]
Codex Cortesianus, [14]
Cœlenterata, [7]
Cœlenterata, aid to collector of, [11]
Commentary on “Sio Shalako” by Walter Hough, [25]
Condensers, effect of, on brush discharge from Holtz machine, [5]
Coral Islands, [7]
Cremation in cliff-dwellings, [20]
Crows, carrying of objects by, [7]
Crustacea, report on, [9]
Ctenophora, [7]
Cuba, cacimbas of the Isle of Pines, [21]
Cuba, prehistoric culture of, [19]
Culture, prehistoric, of Cuba, [19]
Culture and environment in Lesser Antilles, [22]
Culture of Tusayan, [14]
Death of a celebrated Hopi, [16]
Designs on prehistoric Hopi pottery, [26]
Discophora, [7]
Dolls of Tusayan Indians, [13]
Ducks transporting clams, [7]
Eagles, property-right in, [17]
Echidna hystrix, myology of, [5]
Echinarachnius, development of, [7]
Echinodermata, aid to collector of, [11]
Echinodermata, report on, [9]
Egyptian experiences, [22]
Elbow-stones, Porto Rican, [22]
El Casa del Tepozteco, mural relief figures of, [19]
Electricity, dissipation of, by flames, [5]
El Paso, Texas, Pueblo settlements near, [18]
Engraved celts from the Antilles, [23]
Environment, culture and, in Lesser Antilles, [22]
Environment, influence of, on aboriginal cults, [15]
Erin Bay, shell-heap at, [22]
Ethnobotany, contribution to, [14]
Far View House, [24]
Far View House, general information, [25]
Fauna, surface, of Bay of Fundy, [9]
Feather symbol in Hopi designs, [16]
Fewkes Cañon, cliff-ruins in, [23]
Fictitious ruin in Gila Valley, [19]
Field-work in Arizona in 1897, [16]
Figurines in Austrian folk-religion, [17]
First pueblo ruin mentioned in Spanish documents, [24]
Flagstaff, Arizona, ruins near, [17]
Flora of Santa Barbara Islands, [10]
Flute altar, Oraibi, [14]
Flute altars, Micoñinovi, [15]
Flute observance, Walpi, [13]
Flute and Snake ceremonies, Tusayan, [17]
Folk-lore, Passamaquoddy, [11]
Foot race, Tusayan, [12]
Gila Valley, fictitious ruin in, [19]
Gila Valley, ruins of, [20]
God “D” in Codex Cortesianus, [14]
Graf collection of Greek portraits, [13]
Grand Manan, zoölogical reconnoissance in, [10]
Great stone monuments, [22]
Greek portraits, Graf collection, [13]
Hano, initiation at, [24]
Hano pueblo, winter solstice altars at, [16]
Hemenway collection at Madrid, [14]
Heteropods, sucker of fin of, [6]
Hindu and Parsee sand painting, [13]
Holtz machine, effect of condensers on brush discharge from, [5]
Hopi [article], [20]
Hopi, Alósaka cult of, [17]
Hopi basket dances, [16]
Hopi ceremonial frames, [19]
Hopi designs, feather symbol in, [16]
Hopi festivals, minor, [18]
Hopi Indians, Sun worship of, [26]
Hopi katcinas, drawn by native artists, [18]
Hopi myth and ritual, butterfly in, [20]
Hopi pottery, designs on, [26]
Hopi, property-right in eagles, [17]
Hopi pueblos, sun’s influence on form of, [19]
Hopi ritual, growth of the, [16]
Hopi shrines near East Mesa, Arizona, [19]
Hopi snake washing, [16]
Hopi worship, sacrificial element in, [15]
Hopi worship, Sky-god personations in, [18]
Hopi. See Moki, Moqui.
Hopiland, initiation at Hano in, [24]
Hovenweep, castles and towers of, [26]
Human effigy vase from Arizona, [16]
Hydroid parasitic on a fish, [8]
Initiation at Hano, [24]
Inlaid objects: a correction, [19]
Interpretation of katcina worship, [17]
Introductory remarks, [21]
Invertebrata, California, [9]
Isle of Pines, cacimbas of, [21]
Jalapa, Vera Cruz, ancient megalith in, [19]
Jelly-fishes of Narragansett Bay, [5]
Jelly-fishes, tubular, [5]
Journal of American Ethnology and Archæology, [12]
Katcina worship, interpretation of, [17]
Katcinas, Hopi, [18]
Katcinas, Tusayan, [15]
Kinship of Tusayan villagers, [13]
Kneeland, Samuel, life and work of, [10]
Kópeli, Snake chief at Walpi, [16]
Lā′-lā-kōn-ta, a Tusayan dance, [12]
Larva, a new pelagic, [7]
Larva, marine, and its affinities, [9]
Lesser Antilles, culture and environment, [22]
Mam-zrau′-ti, Tusayan ceremony, [12]
Maya codex, figures in, [13]
Mayahandschriften, die Göttergestalten der, [16]
Mayas, die Tagegötter der, [16]
Medusa, rhizostomatous, from New England, [8]
Medusæ, American, [7]
Medusæ, Californian, [9]
Medusæ of Caribbean Sea and Gulf of Mexico, [7]
Medusæ, collected in region of Gulf Stream, [8], [10]
Medusæ collected by Lady Franklin Bay Expedition, [8], [9]
Medusæ, deep-sea, [8]
Medusæ, free, budding in, [5]
Medusæ from New England, [8]
Medusæ from the Bermudas, [6]
Medusæ, method of defense among, [11]
Medusæ, new mode of life among, [8]
Megalith in Jalapa, Vera Cruz, [19]
Mesa Verde National Park, an appreciation of, [26]
Mesa Verde National Park, antiquities of, [20]
Mesa Verde National Park, new type of ruin in, [23]
Mesa Verde National Park, prehistoric ruins of, [25]
Mesa Verde National Park, work in, [24]
Mesa Verde pueblo and its people, [24]
Mesa Verde types of pueblos, [24]
Mexico, eastern, antiquities of, [19]
Micoñinovi Flute altars, [15]
Migration traditions, Tusayan, [17]
Mimbres Valley, archæology of, [22]
Minor Hopi festivals, [18]
Mitla, Wand-Malereien von, [14]
Mitología de los Pueblos de Tusayan, [12]
Moki Snake dance, meaning of, [11]
Moki, Sun worship among the, [16]
Moqui ceremonials, [11]
Morphology of Tusayan altars, [15]
Mortar, stone, from southern Arizona, [25]
Mural relief figures of El Casa del Tepozteco, [19]
Nā-ác-nai-ya, a Tusayan ceremony, [12]
Navaho National Monument, report on, [21]
New Fire ceremony, Tusayan, [14]
New-fire ceremony at Walpi, [17]
New Mexico, prehistoric remains in, [23]
New type of southwestern ruin, [20]
Notes on Ethnology, [17]
Nova Scotia, pictograph from, [11]
Obituary, [16]
Ophiopholis, development of, [7]
Ophiuroid pluteus, “lateral rods” of, [7]
Oraibi Flute altar, [14]
Owakülti altar at Sichomovi, [17]
Pacific as field for investigation, [23]
Pá-lü-lü-koñ-ti, a Tusayan ceremony, [13]
Passamaquoddy folk-lore, [11]
Personages who appear in a Tusayan ceremony, [13]
Phonograph, use of, among the Zuñi, [11]
Phonograph, use of, in study of Indian languages, [11]
Phonograph, Edison, used in preservation of Indian languages, [11]
Phonograph, studies of Zuñi songs and rituals with, [11]
Physophoræ, embryonic tentacular knobs of, [6]
Physophore, a new, [8]
Pictograph from Nova Scotia, [11]
Pictographs, Porto Rican, [18]
Pictographs, Tusayan, [12]
Plœophysa, a new Physophore, [8]
Polyps, Acalephs and, [6]
Porto Rican elbow-stones, [22]
Porto Rico, aborigines of, [19]
Porto Rico, archæology of, [20]
Porto Rico pictographs, [18]
Porto Rico, prehistoric, [18]
Porto Rico, stone collar from, [22]
Pottery, ancient Zuñi, [20]
Pottery, animal figures on, [23]
Pottery, Hopi, designs on, [26]
Pottery, unique form of, [25]
Precolumbian West Indian amulets, [18]
Prehistoric culture of Cuba, [19]
Prehistoric island culture areas of America, [26]
Prehistoric Mesa Verde pueblo and its people, [24]
Prehistoric Porto Rican pictographs, [18]
Prehistoric Porto Rico, [18]
Prehistoric remains in Arizona, New Mexico and Colorado, [24]
Prehistoric remains in New Mexico, [23]
Prehistoric remains in New Mexico, Colorado, and Utah, [25]
Prehistoric ruins in southwestern Colorado and southeastern Utah, [25]
Prehistoric ruins of Gila Valley, [20]
Prince Edward Island, shell-heap in, [15]
Property-right in Eagles among the Hopi, [17]
Pteropod Mollusca, report on, [9]
Pueblo and Mexican water symbol, [19]
Pueblo architecture, unit type of, [23]
Pueblo culture and its relationships, [24]
Pueblo ruins near Flagstaff, Arizona, [17]
Pueblo ruins near Winslow, Arizona, [16]
Pueblo ruins, two summers’ work in, [18]
Pueblo settlements near El Paso, Texas, [18]
Pueblos, prehistoric, western neighbors of, [21]
Red Rock country, cliff villages of, [15]
Red Rock country, two ruins in, [15]
Religious ceremony of the Hopi Indians, [24]
Rhizophysa filiformis, structure of, [5]
Ritual, Hopi, growth of, [16]
Ritual, Tusayan, [15]
Ruin called Casa Grande, [12]
Ruined pueblo discovered by Vargas, [18]
Ruins in or near Zuñi Reservation, [12]
Ruins near Winslow, Arizona, [16]
Ruins of Red Rock country, [15]
Sacrificial element in Hopi worship, [15]
Sand painting, Hindu and Parsee, [13]
Santa Barbara channel, across the, [9]
Santa Barbara Islands, flora of, [10]
Santa Cruz. See Santa Barbara channel.
Santo Domingo, zemes from, [11]
Sea-urchin excavations at Guaymas, Mexico, [10]
Sea-urchins, excavations made in rocks by, [10]
Shell-heap at Erin Bay, [22]
Shell-heap in Prince Edward Island, [15]
Shells, from Tusayan pueblos, [15]
Sia and Tusayan Snake ceremonials, [14]
Sichomovi pueblo, altar at, [17]
Sikyatki, ruins of, [15]
Sio Shalako, commentary on, [25]
Siphonophora, [7]
Siphonophores, [5]
Sky-god personations in Hopi worship, [18]
Snake ceremonials at Walpi, [13]
Snake ceremonials, Sia and Tusayan, comparison of, [14]
Snake ceremonies, Tusayan, [15], [17]
Snake dance, Moki, meaning of, [11]
Snake washing, Hopi, [16]
Southwest, type ruins in, [19]
Southwestern architecture, types of, [25]
Southwestern ruin, new type of, [20]
Spirorbis borealis Daudin, larval forms of, [7]
Spruce-tree House, [21]
Spruce-tree House, antiquities of the Mesa Verde, [20]
Spruce-Tree House, excavation and repair of, [20]
Star fishes, calcareous plates of, [10]
Statuette, Antillean, [20]
Stone collar from Porto Rico, [22]
Stone collars and tripointed idols, Porto Rico, [18]
Stone monuments, great, [22]
Stone mortar from southern Arizona, [25]
Summer ceremonials at Tusayan pueblos, [12]
Summer ceremonials at Zuñi pueblo, [11]
Summer ceremonials at Zuñi and Moqui pueblos, [11]
Sun Temple in Mesa Verde National Park, [23]
Sun Temple, relation of, to “towers”, [23]
Sun Temple, excavation and repair of, [24]
Sun Temple, general information regarding, [25]
Sun worship among the Moki, [16]
Sun worship of the Hopi Indians, [26]
Sun’s influence on form of Hopi pueblos, [19]
Tachyglossa hystrix, myology of, [5]
Tanoan-speaking community in Tusayan, [13]
Tetraplatia volitans, affinities of, [6]
Theatrical performance at Walpi, [17]
Totemic signatures, Tusayan, [15]
Towers and castles of the Southwest, [25]
Trinidad, shell-heap at Erin Bay, [22]
Tripointed idols, Porto Rico, [18]
Tusayan altars, morphology of, [15]
Tusayan and Sia Snake ceremonials, [14]
Tusayan archæology, [15]
Tusayan ceremonials, summer, [12]
Tusayan ceremony, New Fire, [14]
Tusayan ceremony, personages in, [13]
Tusayan ceremony, the Mam-zrau′-ti, [12]
Tusayan ceremony, the Nā-ác-nai-ya, [12]
Tusayan ceremony, the Pá-lü-lü-koñ-ti, [13]
Tusayan dance, [12]
Tusayan dolls, [13]
Tusayan Flute and Snake ceremonies, [17]
Tusayan foot race, [12]
Tusayan Indians, ceremonial circuit among, [12]
Tusayan katcinas, [15]
Tusayan legend, [13]
Tusayan migration traditions, [17]
Tusayan, mitología de los Pueblos de, [12]
Tusayan monsters, [14]
Tusayan pictographs, [12]
Tusayan, prehistoric culture, [14]
Tusayan pueblos, ceremonials at, [12]
Tusayan pueblos, shells from, [15]
Tusayan ritual, [15]
Tusayan Snake ceremonies, [15]
Tusayan, Tanoan-speaking community in, [13]
Tusayan totemic signatures, [15]
Tusayan villagers, cardinal points of, [13]
Tusayan villagers, kinship of, [13]
Two summers’ work in pueblo ruins, [18]
Type ruins in the Southwest, [19]
Types of prehistoric southwestern architecture, [24]
Unique form of prehistoric pottery, [25]
Unit type of Pueblo architecture, origin of, [23]
Vandals, and the safeguard, [18]
Vanished races of the Caribbean, [22]
Vargas, ruins discovered by, [18]
Ventilators in ceremonial rooms, [20]
Vera Cruz, megalith in, [19]
Verde River and Walnut Creek antiquities, [21]
Vermes, report on, [9]
Villages, castles and towers of southwestern Colorado, [26]
Walpi, ceremonies at, [14]
Walpi Flute observance, [13]
Walpi New-fire ceremony, [17]
Walpi, Snake ceremonials at, [13]
Walpi, theatrical performance at, [17]
Walpi, winter solstice ceremony at, [16]
Wand-Malereien von Mitla, [14]
Water symbol, Pueblo and Mexican, [19]
Wa-wac-ka-tci-na, Tusayan foot race, [12]
Western neighbors of prehistoric Pueblos, [21]
West Indian amulets, [18]
West Indian religious beliefs, notes on, [20]
West Indies, antiquities of, [22]
West Indies, archæological trip to, [18]
West Indies, ethnological investigations in, [22]
West Indies, Island culture areas of, [26]
West Indies, prehistoric cultural centers, [23]
Winslow, Arizona, ruins near, [16]
Winter solstice altars at Hano, [16]
Winter solstice ceremony at Walpi, [16]
Worm larvæ, development of, [6]
Zemes from Santo Domingo, [11]
Zoölogical reconnoissance in Grand Manan, [10]
Zuñi and Moqui pueblos, summer ceremonials at, [11]
Zuñi pottery, [20]
Zuñi Reservation, ruins in, [12]
Zuñi songs and rituals, studies of, with phonograph, [11]
Zuñi, summer ceremonials at, [11]
TRANSCRIBER’S NOTES:
Obvious typographical errors have been corrected.
Inconsistencies in hyphenation have been standardized.
Archaic or variant spelling has been retained.