[9]. Pre-Historic America, Nadaillac, p. 526.
[10]. Native Races, vol. III, pp. 67, 68. For this statement Bancroft in a foot note quotes the following authorities: Boturini, Idea de una Hist., pp. 113, 114; id., Catalogo, pp. 39, 40; Clavigero, Storia Ant. del Messico, tom. 1, pp. 129, 130, tom. 2, p. 16; Spiegazione delle Tavole del Codice Mexicano (Vàcano) tav. 7, in Kingsborough's Mex. Ant., vol. V, pp. 164, 165; Gemelli Carreri, in Churchill's Col. Voy., vol. IV, p. 481; Humboldt, Vues des Cordilleres, tom. 1, pp. 114, 115, tom. 2, pp. 175-8; Tylor's Anahuac, pp. 276, 277; Gondra, in Prescott, Conquesta de Mexico, tom. 3, pp. 1-10. The remainder of Bancroft's note following this citation of authorities, wherein he seeks to discredit the force of these native traditions concerning the Tower, the confusion of tongues and the dispersion of mankind, as in the case of Nadaillac's effort of a similar character, remarked in a previous note, will receive consideration at the close of this series of quotations concerning the Tower, etc., p. 273.
[11]. America Before Columbus, P. De Roo, vol. I, pp. 415, 416.
[12]. America Before Columbus, P. De Roo, vol. I, pp. 417, 418.
[13]. Should any one desire to make a larger collection I refer him to the authorities already referred to in a previous note on a passage from Bancroft; as also Nadaillac's Pre-Historic America, ch. 10; P. De Roo, America Before Columbus, vol. I, chapters sixteen to twenty inclusive; and Rivero & Tschudi's Peruvian Antiquities, chapter VII.
[14]. Native Races, vol. V, p. 12.
[15]. Pre-Historic America, p. 530. For the objections of the agnostic Bancroft see Native Races, vol. III, 68, 69, note; and for the objections urged by Prescott see Conquest of Mexico, vol. II, appendix, p. 387.
[16]. Pre-Historic America, pp. 525, 531.
[17]. Ante., p. 436.
[18]. Exodus, 14.