[1704] The Report of Lieut. W. H. Emory, directly in charge of the survey (Ho. Ex. Doc. 135, 34th Cong., 1st sess.), was printed separately in 3 vols. in 1859.

[1705] Report upon U. S. Geol. Surveys, west of the one hundredth meridian in charge of First Lieut. Geo. M. Wheeler, vol. vii., Archæology (Washington, 1879). Ernest Ingersoll, a member of the survey, published some papers on the “Village Indians of New Mexico” in the Journal Amer. Geog. Soc., vi. and vii.

[1706] Cf. L. H. Morgan on this ruin in the Peab. Mus. Rept., xii. 536, and in a paper in the Trans. Amer. Ass. Adv. Sci. (St. Louis, 1877).

[1707] His notes form a good bibliography. He intends as a supplement an account of the different explorations prior to the seventeenth century.

[1708] Bancroft (Native Races, i. 529, 599; iv. 662, etc.) gives the best clues to authorities prior to 1875. Short (ch. 7) condenses more, and Baldwin (p. 78) still more. Nadaillac, L’Amérique préhistorique (ch. 5) also summarizes. Morgan studies the social condition of this ancient people (Systems of Consanguinity, Part ii. ch. 6; Houses and House Life, ch. 6; Peabody Mus. Repts., xii.). Cf. James Stevenson’s “Ancient Habitations of the Southwest” in Journal Amer. Geog. Soc., xviii. (1886), and his illustrated Catalogue of Collections in Powell’s Second Rept. Bureau of Ethnol.; E. A. Barber on “Les anciens pueblos” in Cong. des Américanistes, 1877, i. 23, in which he traces a gradation from the moundbuilders through the old pueblo peoples to the Toltecs; C. Schoebel’s account of an expedition in the Archives de la Soc. Amér. de France, nouv. ser. i., and the references in Poole’s Index, i. 1063; ii. 359.

Dividing the remaining references into localities, we note for New Mexico the following: J. H. Carleton in the Smithsonian Rept. (1854); W. B. Lyon (Ibid. 1871); J. A. McParlin (Ibid. 1877); Turner in Am. Ethnol. Soc. Trans., ii.; and A. W. Bell in Journal of the Ethnol. Soc. (London), Oct., 1869. Carleton describes the ruins also in the Western Journal, xiv. 185. Clarence Pullen describes the people in Journal Amer. Geog. Soc., xix. 22. For Colorado: E. L. Berthoud in Smithsonian Repts., 1867, 1871. G. L. Cannon in Ibid. 1877; H. Gannett in Pop. Sci. Monthly, xvi. 666 (Mar., 1880); Amer. Naturalist, x. 31; Lippincott’s Mag., xxvi. 54. For Arizona: F. E. Grossmann, J. C. Y. Lee, and R. T. Burr in Smithsonian Repts., respectively for 1871, 1872, 1879, with other references in Poole under “Moqui.”

[1709] This scope of treatment is manifest in the large number of papers contained in the Smithsonian Reports. See W. J. Rhees’ Catal. of Publ. of Sm. Inst. (Washington, 1882), pp. 252-3.

[1710] Beschreibung der Reise (Göttingen, 1764; Eng. transl., Lond., 1772).

[1711] Journal of two visits, etc., Burlington, 1774 (Thomson’s Bibl. of Ohio, no. 657).

[1712] His account is copied in the Mass. Mag., Oct., 1791.