[136] Col. A. G. Brackett, in Rep. of the Smithson. Inst. 1879, p. 329.
[137] Capt. W. P. Clark, The Indian Sign Language, p. 118. (Philadelphia, 1885.)
[138] Ibid., p. 338.
[139] See Contributions to North American Ethnology, Vol. I., p. 224. (Washington, 1877).
[140] R. Virchow, Crania Ethnica Americana.
[141] W. P. Clark, The Indian Sign Language, p. 118.
[142] The Snake Dance of the Moquis of Arizona. By John G. Bourke. (New York, 1884.)
[143] For these legends see Captain F. E. Grossman, U. S. A., in Report of the Smithsonian Institution, pp. 407-10. They attribute the Casas Grandes to Sivano, a famous warrior, the direct descendant of Söhö, the hero of their flood myth.
[144] The Apaches called them Tze-tinne, Stone House People. See Capt. John G. Bourke, Journal of American Folk-Lore, 1890, p. 114. The Apaches Tontos were the first to wander down the Little Colorado river.
[145] See the descriptions of the Nevomes (Pimas) in Perez de Ribas, Historia de los Triumphos de Nuestra Santa Fé, Lib. VI., cap. 2. (Madrid, 1645.)