[5.1] S. H. C. Hawtry, J. A. I., xxxi. 290. Cf. Grubb, 114. Similar statements are made concerning other South American tribes (J. A. I., xiii. 209, 253).
[5.2] Batchelor, 357.
[6.1] Neuhauss, iii. 448 note. Cf. Introduction and pp. 154, 507.
[6.2] Marillier, reviewing Miss Kingsley’s Travels; Rev. Hist. Rel., xxxix. 137.
[7.1] Spencer and Gillen, C. T., 139 note.
[7.2] Rev. J. Macdonald, J. A. I., xx. 120. Cf. Junod, S. A. Tribe, ii. 278. Dr Theal says that it is only since European ideas have been disseminated among these peoples that the question of the place of the dead has arisen; and he points to the similarity in mental condition between them and the peasantry of Europe (Yellow and Dark-skinned People, 185).
[8.1] Journ. Am. F. L., xxi. 233, 236.
[9.1] Wilson, Peasant Life, 6.
[11.1] Sproat, 120.
[11.2] Boas, Mind, 111.