[201] Adam , p. 319. Other sources for tales of the deluge are Borba , pp. 223-25; Kissenberth, in ZE xl. 49; Ehrenreich , pp. 30-31; Teschauer; and von Martius.
[202] D'Orbigny, iii. 209-14; von den Steinen [a], pp. 282-85; , pp. 322-27; and cf. the Kapoi legends in Koch-Grünberg [a]. The Yuracara tale narrated by d'Orbigny is one of the best and most fully reported of South American myths.
[203] On the physical and ethnological conditions of the Chaco and the Abiponean districts the important authorities are Dobrizhoffer; Grubb [a], ; Koch, "Zur Ethnographie der Paraguay-Gebiete," in MitAGW xxxiii (1903); for the southern region important are, Voyages of the Adventure and the Beagle; the publications of the Mission scientifique du Cap Horn; Cooper, Analytical and Critical Bibliography of the Tribes of Tierra del Fuego and Adjacent Territory (63 BBE), with map; and El Norte de la Patagonia, with map, published by the Argentine Ministry of Public Works, Buenos Aires, 1914.
[204] D'Orbigny, L'Homme américain, p. 233; J. Guevara, Historia, pp. 32, 265 (citing Fernandez, Relación historial, p. 39).
[205] Dobrizhoffer, ii, ch. viii (pp. 57-59, 64-65 quoted); ch. x (p. 94 quoted).
[206] Grubb , chh. xi, xii, xiv (pp. 139-41 quoted), xvi (p. 163 quoted); cf. Karsten, sections i, iii.
[207] T. Guevara [a], i, ch. viii, "Los mitos y las ideas relijiosas de los Indios," pp. 223-25. Latcham, JAI xxxix, gives an account of Araucanian ideas, in general corresponding to Guevara, to whom he is apparently indebted.
[208] Molina, ch. v (pp. 84, 86, 91 quoted).
[209] Vicuña Cifuentes, especially sections vi-xi, xiv-xvi, xxi-xxiii. This work is particularly valuable in that it collects the statements of many authorities in regard to the creatures of Chilean folk-lore.
[210] Dobrizhoffer, ii. 89-90.