[622]. “The Turquois. A Study of its History, Mineralogy, Geology, Ethnology, Archæology, Mythology, Folklore and Technology.” By Joseph E. Pogue. Third Memoir, vol. xii, National Academy of Sciences, Washington, D. C., 1915, 162 p., plates 22, 4to.
[623]. Pogue, “The Turquois,” citing Russell, “The Pima Indians,” in 26th Annual Report of the Bureau of Amer. Ethnology, 1904–1905, p. 112.
[624]. “Handbook of American Indians North of Mexico,” ed. by Frederick Webb Hodge; Smithsonian Inst., Bur. of Am. Ethn., Bull. 30, Pt. II, p. 178; Washington, 1910.
[625]. W. J. Hoffman, “The Midêwiwin, or Grand Medicine Society of the Ojibway”; 7th Report of the Bureau of Ethnology, 1885–86, Washington, 1891, pp. 149–300, with many illustrations.
[626]. Loc. cit., Pl. XI, fig. 7, opp. 220.
[627]. W. J. Hoffman, “The Midêwiwin, or Grand Medicine Society of the Ojibway”; 7th Report of the Bureau of Ethnology, 1885–86, Washington, 1891, p. 277.
[628]. L’Abbé Banier and l’Abbé Mascrier, “Histoire générale des cérémonies, mœurs, et coutumes religieuses de tous les peuples du monde,” Paris, 1741, p. 101.
[629]. Free Museum of Science and Art, Bulletin No. 4, Jan., 1898, p. 183 (with figures).
[630]. John Murdoch, “The Point Barrow Eskimo,” 9th Report of the Bureau of Ethnology, 1887–88, Washington, 1892, p. 435.
[631]. Ibid., p. 439, fig. 426.