[287] See p. [323], for illustration of a Dakota with plaited hair.—Ed.
[288] See Plate 81, figure 9, in the accompanying atlas, our volume xxv.—Ed.
[289] For the Teton, see our volume v, p. 104, note 71. The Teton bands (as at present classified) are the Brulé, Sans Arcs, Blackfeet (not to be confused with the Blackfoot tribe of Algonquian origin), Miniconjou, Two Kettle, Oglala, and Hunkpapa. The Yankton bands are not classified by Powell.—Ed.
[290] See p. [287], for illustration of method of wearing hair.—Ed.
[291] See Plate 30, in the accompanying atlas, our volume xxv, for an Indian horse-race.—Ed.
[292] See p. [323], for illustration of this Teton.—Ed.
[293] See p. [323], for illustration of hill of baked clay.—Ed.
[294] Called "No Timber Creek," by Lewis and Clark. It is now Chantier in Stanley County, a term clipped from its Siouan name.—Ed.
[295] For the Cheyenne River see our volume v, p. 126, note 81. Cheyenne Island, about three miles long, below the river's embouchment, was called "Pania" by Lewis and Clark. They note also an old Arikara village, of which only a circular wall remained.—Ed.
[296] For the Cheyenne, see our volume v, p. 140, note 88. Their migration was from the northeast, the habitat of the Algonquian stock.—Ed.