[4] Gatschet says there is a word in the dialect of Isleta, N. M., Sibúlodd, meaning buffalo, and it is possible that a native name for the animal has been mixed up with the name of the first group of towns, written often Cevola. For a description of these towns, etc., see Coronado, by George Parker Winship, A. S. Barnes & Co. edition.

[5] Voyages through North America, Alexander Mackenzie, vol. ii., p. 27, Barnes edition.

[6] An excellent monograph on the American Bison, by J. A. Allen, edited by Dr. Elliott Coues, is contained in the Report of the U. S. Geological Survey of Colorado and Adjacent Territories, by F. V. Hayden, for 1875. See also works of W. T. Hornaday.

[7] Les Singularitez de la France Antarctique.

[8] Owned by the Buffalo Fine Arts Academy.

[9] The Wild Northland, Sir William Francis Butler, K.C.B.

[10] Pemmican, from the Cree language—pimmi, meat, and kon, fat.

[11] The English Sportsman in the Western Prairies.

[12] Buffalo Land, W. E. Webb.

[13] Buffalo Land, p. 304.