[17] Journal of the Royal Anthropological Institute for December, 1909, p. 330.
[18] British New Guinea, p. 94.
[19] Melanesians of British New Guinea, p. 32.
[20] Journal of the Royal Anthropological Institute for December, 1909, p. 329.
[21] Seligmann and Strong—Geographical Journal for March, 1906, p. 232.
[22] Seligmann’s Melanesians of British New Guinea, p. 27.
[23] Dr. Strong has referred (Geographical Journal for September, 1908, p. 272) to the considerable areas of open grass country at the source of the St. Joseph river; and in his remarks which appeared in the Annual Report for June, 1906, p. 28, he referred to the same matter, and spoke of the valleys being for the most part less steep than those of the Kuni district.
[24] I must state that Plate [2] represents a scene taken from a spot near to Deva-deva, which, though close to what is regarded as the boundary between the Kuni and Mafulu areas, is in fact just within the former. The general appearance of the scenery is, however, distinctly Mafulu.