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Notes

The following data is extracted from Southern Contacts of the Indians North of the Gulf of Mexico.

(1) Brinton, in Historical Magazine, 2d series, 1867, I, pp. 16-18.

(2) American Anthropologist (N. S.), Vol. XVII, no. 1, pp. 17-40.

(3) Le Page du Pratz, Histoire de La Louisiana, Paris 1758, III, 62-70.

(4) De la Vente, letter of 1704, in Compte Rendu Cong. Internal. Amer.,
15th sess., I, 37.

(5) Le Page du Pratz, op. cit.

(6) A few pieces of Pueblo ware have been found; a fragment kind from southwestern Missorná fell into the hands of Mr. W. E. Myer, collaborator in the Bureau Ethnology. West of the Mississippi, probably in the Caddo country the army of De Soto "found some turkoises, and shawls of cotton, which the Indians gave them to understand, by signs, were brought from the direction of the sunset."-Narratives of De Soto, ed. Bourne, I. p. 181. New York, 1904.

(7) Bull. 55. Bureau of Am. Ethnology, p . 52 . The Caddohadacho country is known to have been the principal source of supply for the tribes about who evidently passed the material on to the Pueblos. ,

(8) Bartram, Travels, London, 1792, p. 225.

(9) See John Leo Williams, The Territory of Florida, 1837, p. 242.

(10) Documentos Inéditos, V. pp. 536-7-Madrid, 1866.

(11) See Morley in Bull. 57, Bureau of American Ethnology, pp. 2-7. Washington, 1915.

(12) Twenty-fifth Ann. Rep. Bur. Am. Eeth., pp. 178-9-Ancl. Notes and Monographs (Heye Mus. Pinh. ), Cuber before Columbs, Part. I, Vol.11.

(13) Bull. 73, Bur. Am. Ethnol., pp. 27-31.

(14) Procedings Am. Philosoph. Society, XVIII p. .478.

(15) Fewkes in Twenty-fifth Ann. Rep., loc. cit.

(16) O. F. Cook, in Smithsonian Report for 1919, pp. 307-326.

(17) Journ. Wash. Acad. Sci., Vol. VI, pp. 136-7.

(18) American Anthropologist, (N. S.), VII, pp. 71-79.

(19) Memoirs of the Peabody Museum of American Archaeology and
Ethnology, Harvard University, Vol. "VI, p. 247; Cambridge, 1913.

Source: Southern Contacts of the Indians North of the Gulf of Mexico

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