[209]. Second Voy., p. 537.
[210]. Compare Dall, Alaska, p. 22.
[211]. There are several frocks so trimmed in the National Museum, from the Mackenzie and Anderson region.
[212]. Second Grinnell Exp., vol. 1, p. 203.
[213]. Egede, p. 131; Crantz, i, p. 137 and Pl. III. (Greenland); Bessels, op. cit., p. 865 (Smith Sound—married women only); Parry, 2nd Voy., p. 491, and numerous illustrations, passim (Iglulik); Packard. Naturalist Vol. 19, p. 6, Pl. XXIII (Labrador), and Kumlien, l. c., p. 33 (Cumberland Gulf). See also several specimens in the National Museum from Ungava (collected by L. M. Turner) and the Mackenzie and Anderson rivers (collected by MacFarlane). The hoods from the last region, while still much larger and wider than those in fashion at Point Barrow, are not so enormous as the more eastern ones. The little peak on the top of the woman’s hood at Point Barrow may be a reminiscence of the pointed hood worn by the women mentioned by Bessels, op. cit.
[214]. Parry, 2d Voy., p. 494, and 1st Voy., p. 283.
[215]. Monographic, etc., p. xiv.
[216]. Petroff, op. cit., p. 134, Pls. 4 and 5. See also specimens in the National Museum.
[217]. Petroff, op. cit., p. 139, and Liscansky, Voy., etc., p. 194.
[218]. Dall, Alaska, p. 379.