[56] Bolton, Historical Memoirs of New California by Fray Francisco Palóu, Vol. IV, p. 48.

[57] I. T. Kelly, "Coast Miwok Ethnography." (MS).

[58] Wagner, Spanish Voyages, p. 158. J. Broughton, in his Voyage of Discovery to the North Pacific Ocean ... in the Years 1795 ... 1798 (London, 1804), said that the Drake's Bay Indian men whom he saw were naked, but that the women were clothed "in some degree."

[59] "Menzies' California Journal," ed. by Alice Eastwood, California Historical Society Quarterly, II (1924), 302-303.

[60] Wagner, "The Last Spanish Exploration," p. 331.

[61] James Colnett, The Journal of Captain James Colnett aboard the "Argonaut" from April 26, 1789 to November 3, 1791, ed. by F. N. Howay, Champlain Society, Publ. No. 26 (Toronto, 1940), p. 175.

[62] Wagner, Spanish Voyages, p. 159.

[63] Exact documentation is impossible here, but such an explanation would fit the facts, and the custom of sending a messenger to announce a visit was a feature of the whole area (Loeb, Pomo Folkways, p. 49).

[64] See E. W. Gifford and A. L. Kroeber. Culture Element Distributions, IV: Pomo, Univ. Calif. Publ. Am. Arch. and Ethn., Vol. XXXVII, No. 4 (Berkeley, 1937), elements nos. 805-807, p. 154.

[65] Barrett, Ethno-Geography, p. 415.