[379.5] Featherman, Papuo-Mel., 87.
[379.6] iv. Rep. Austr. Ass., 628.
[379.7] ii. Rep. Austr. Ass., 601.
[379.8] Rev. B. Danks, in xviii. Journ. Anthr. Inst., 292.
[379.9] Boas, in vi. Rep. Bur. Ethn., 615, quoting Lyon.
[380.1] Dawson, 7, 27. See as to the natives of Northern Queensland, xiii. Journ. Anthr. Inst., 298; as to various tribes of South Australia and its northern territory, xxiv. ibid., 170, 178, 181, 194; as to other tribes, ii. Curr, 197, 425, 474; iii. 21, 546.
[380.2] Garnett, ii. Wom., 234.
[380.3] Saxo, 87; Elton’s version, 106; i. Corp. Poet. Bor., 105. These mythological cases as testimony to an obsolete custom of polyandry may be compared with similar references in ancient Hindu writings quoted by Westermarck, 457.
[381.1] ii. Rep. Austr. Ass., 314, 320; vi. Journ. Ind. Arch., 319.
[381.2] iii. N. Ind. N. and Q., 168.