associated with Mexican Calendar system, [25];

indicated by name Teo-Culhuacan or Aztlan, [56];

represented by Mexican sacred dance, [59];

indicated in Vienna Codex by circle of footstep, [90];

in Zuñi religious ceremony, [129];

in religious ceremony and irrigating canals of Peru, [145], [146];

symbolized by Nahuiollin on Mexican Calendar Stone, [251-52];

by one-footed man on Mexican “Sacrificial Stone,” [259];

in ancient plan of Mexican government, [273];

pictured divinity surrounded by circle of footsteps, [279];