[69] See some examples in my Essays of an Americanist, pp. 288-290 (Philadelphia, 1890).
[70] G. Holm, Les Grönlandais Orientaux, p. 382 (Copenhagen, 1889).
[71] Dr. A. Pfizmaier, Darlegungen Grönländischer Verbalformen (Wien, 1885).
[72] On the relative position of the Chukchis, Namollos and Yuit, consult Dall in American Naturalist, 1881, p. 862; J. W. Kelly, in Circular of the U. S. Bureau of Education, No. 2, 1890, p. 8; A. Pfizmaier, Die Sprachen der Aleuten, p. 1 (Vienna, 1884). The Yuits are also known as Tuski. The proper location of the Namollos is on the Arctic Sea, from East Cape to Cape Shelagskoi (Dall).
[73] Proceedings of the U. S. National Museum, 1883, p. 427. All of Clement G. Markham’s arguments for the Asiatic origin of the Eskimos have been refuted.
[74] Either from the river Olutora and some islands near its mouth (Petroff); or from Eleutes, a tribe in Siberia, whom the Russians thought they resembled (Pinart).
[75] Ivan Petroff, in Trans. Amer. Anthrop. Soc., Vol. II, p. 90.
[76] Comp. H. Winkler, Ural-Altäische Völker und Sprachen, s. 119, and Dall, Contributions to N. Amer. Ethnology, Vol. I, p. 49, who states that their tongue is distinctly connected with the Innuit of Alaska.
[77] Dr. A. Pfizmaier, Die Sprache der Aleuten und Fuchsinseln, s. 4 (Vienna, 1884).
[78] Dall, loc. cit., p. 47.