Annual Report of the Trustees of the Peabody Museum of American Archaeology and Ethnology, 2. köideJohn Wilson and Son, 1880 |
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Page 7
... American Archæology and Ethnology : - GENTLEMEN : - -Since my last report , dated January 19 , 1876 , the centennial year of American Independence has closed and with it the decennial of this Museum . In relation to the first of these ...
... American Archæology and Ethnology : - GENTLEMEN : - -Since my last report , dated January 19 , 1876 , the centennial year of American Independence has closed and with it the decennial of this Museum . In relation to the first of these ...
Page 8
... American ethnology . During the past year the work in the Museum has been per- formed by Mr. Carr and myself , and we have , principally by Mr. Carr's nearly uninterrupted labor , succeeded in properly caring for and cataloguing all the ...
... American ethnology . During the past year the work in the Museum has been per- formed by Mr. Carr and myself , and we have , principally by Mr. Carr's nearly uninterrupted labor , succeeded in properly caring for and cataloguing all the ...
Page 10
Peabody Museum of American Archaeology and Ethnology. debted for a copy of the rare and costly work , by Mr. Schoolcraft , on the Indian Tribes of North America , and for the continuation of several of the foreign serial publications ...
Peabody Museum of American Archaeology and Ethnology. debted for a copy of the rare and costly work , by Mr. Schoolcraft , on the Indian Tribes of North America , and for the continuation of several of the foreign serial publications ...
Page 11
... American arch- æology during the year is that secured by Dr. C. C. Abbott of Trenton , New Jersey , to whom a small appropriation was granted to enable him to continue his researches . As will be seen by a perusal of his special report ...
... American arch- æology during the year is that secured by Dr. C. C. Abbott of Trenton , New Jersey , to whom a small appropriation was granted to enable him to continue his researches . As will be seen by a perusal of his special report ...
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Common terms and phrases
aboriginal American ancient Archæology argillite arrowheads ashes Axapusco beads Bernal-Diez bones boulders brachycephalic burial calpulli cave celts centre chiefs chipped Clavigero Lib clay collection Cortés crania Curator deposit diameter dolichocephali Durán Cap earth eran evidence explorations F. W. Putnam feet figure flattened flint four fragments of pottery glacial Gomara H. H. Bancroft Herrera Dec History inches Index of breadth Indians Ixtlilxochitl land length LUCIEN CARR Mass Mendieta Lib mentioned Mexicans Mexico Miss Bowling's farm Molina Montezuma Motolinia mound Nahuatl Nashua R. R. original ornaments paleolithic pebbles Peru pots pottery presented probably Prof pueblo quarters rec'd REPORT PEABODY MUSEUM river rude says señor shell side skull soil Spaniards spearpoints specimens steatite stone graves stone implements surface Tennessee Tezcuco Tezozomoc Cap tion Tlacochcalcatl Tlacopan Tlaxcallan Toltecs Torquemada Lib Trenton tribe valley Vedia vessels wall warriors Worcester & Nashua Zurita
Popular passages
Page 183 - This also we humbly and earnestly beg, that human things may not prejudice such as are Divine ; neither that from the unlocking of the gates of sense, and the kindling of a greater natural light, anything of incredulity, or intellectual night, may arise in our minds towards Divine mysteries.
Page 92 - They have near their state-house a square piece of ground well cleaned, and fine sand is carefully strewed over it, when requisite, to promote a swifter motion to what they throw along the surface. Only one or two on a side play at this ancient game. They have a stone about two fingers broad at the edge, and two spans round; each party has a pole of about eight feet long, smooth and tapering at each end, the points flat. They set off abreast of each other at six...
Page 88 - They oftentimes make, of this Shell, a sort of Gorge, which they wear about their Neck in a string; so it hangs on their Collar, whereon sometimes is engraven a Cross, or some odd sort of Figure, which comes next in their Fancy.
Page 494 - FORCE (MF) Some Early Notices of the Indians of Ohio. To What Race did the Mound Builders belong.
Page 77 - All around the inside of the building, betwixt the second range of pillars and the wall, is a range of cabins or sophas, consisting of two or three steps, one above or behind the other, in theatrical order, where the assembly sit or lean down; these sophas are covered with mats or carpets, very curiously made of thin splints of Ash or Oak, woven or platted together...
Page 92 - ... oil, with a proper force, as near as he can guess in proportion to the motion of the stone, that the end may lie close to the stone; when this is the case, the person counts...
Page 404 - They are separated by ditches of three or four yards, and are made by taking the soil from the intervening ditch and throwing it on the chinampa, by which means the ground is raised generally about a yard, and thus forms a small fertile garden, covered with the finest culinary vegetables, fruits, and flowers...
Page 552 - Teculhiiacan, which signifies a land of such whose grandfathers were divine. The Navatalcas [Nahuatlacs] point their beginning and first territory in the figure of a cave, and say they came forth of seven caves to come and people the land of Mexico."13 The same tradition, substantially is given by Herrara,14 and also by Clavigero.15 If by the word Aztlan was intended
Page 422 - It is very striking that, the pueblo having been founded in 1325, and nearly a century having been spent in adding sufficient artificial sod to the originally small solid expanse settled, the Mexicans could have been ready so soon to establish purely decorative parks within an area, every inch of which was valuable to them for subsistence alone ! 3 The Mexican tribe proper clustered exclusively within the pueblo of Tenuchtitlan.
Page 718 - ... skeletons, all of which had been burnt to such an extent as to leave but small fragments of the bones, which were mixed with the ashes and charcoal. Mr. Curtiss thought that in one chamber he found the remains of five 'skeletons and in another thirteen. With...