[101.1] For the Mongolian practice see Amer. Anthr., N.S., xv. 370. The Pueblo Indian practice has been recorded by every scientific enquirer among the tribes.
[102.1] Spencer and Gillen, C. T., 249. Note also the threat which follows.
[102.2] M. Durkheim contends, and I think with justice, that the association of the churinga with individual ancestors, and therefore with their descendants, or rather reincarnations, is secondary (op. cit., 173). But cf. Spencer and Gillen, N. T., 281.
[102.3] Strehlow, ii. 78. He resisted the temptation and avoided the mistake made so often by missionaries of translating by native words Christian terms of fundamentally different content.
[103.1] Spencer and Gillen, N. T., 259 sqq.
[103.2] Ibid., 293.
[104.1] Spencer and Gillen, C. T., chaps. v. and vi. passim; N. T., chap. viii. passim; Strehlow, ii. 75 sqq.
[105.1] Strehlow, iii. 6.
[105.2] Spencer and Gillen, C. T., chap. xvi.; N. T., chap. xv.; Rep. Horn Exped., 180.
[106.1] Spencer and Gillen, C. T., 534, 553. Cf. 480, 538.