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Volume Information Source: American Anthropologist, New Series, Vol. 19, No. 1 (Jan. - Mar., 1917), pp. i-vi Published by: Wiley on behalf of the American Anthropological Association Stable URL: http://www.jstor.org/stable/660197 . Accessed: 15/05/2014 10:34 Your use of the JSTOR archive indicates your acceptance of the Terms & Conditions of Use, available at . http://www.jstor.org/page/info/about/policies/terms.jsp . JSTOR is a not-for-profit service that helps scholars, researchers, and students discover, use, and build upon a wide range of content in a trusted digital archive. We use information technology and tools to increase productivity and facilitate new forms of scholarship. For more information about JSTOR, please contact [email protected]. . Wiley and American Anthropological Association are collaborating with JSTOR to digitize, preserve and extend access to American Anthropologist. http://www.jstor.org This content downloaded from 195.78.108.141 on Thu, 15 May 2014 10:34:31 AM All use subject to JSTOR Terms and Conditions
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Page 1: Volume Information

Volume InformationSource: American Anthropologist, New Series, Vol. 19, No. 1 (Jan. - Mar., 1917), pp. i-viPublished by: Wiley on behalf of the American Anthropological AssociationStable URL: http://www.jstor.org/stable/660197 .

Accessed: 15/05/2014 10:34

Your use of the JSTOR archive indicates your acceptance of the Terms & Conditions of Use, available at .http://www.jstor.org/page/info/about/policies/terms.jsp

.JSTOR is a not-for-profit service that helps scholars, researchers, and students discover, use, and build upon a wide range ofcontent in a trusted digital archive. We use information technology and tools to increase productivity and facilitate new formsof scholarship. For more information about JSTOR, please contact [email protected].

.

Wiley and American Anthropological Association are collaborating with JSTOR to digitize, preserve andextend access to American Anthropologist.

http://www.jstor.org

This content downloaded from 195.78.108.141 on Thu, 15 May 2014 10:34:31 AMAll use subject to JSTOR Terms and Conditions

Page 2: Volume Information

AMERICAN

ANTHROPOLOGIST NEW SERIES

ORGAN OF THE AMERICAN ANTHROPOLOGICAL ASSOCIATION, THE ANTHROPOLOGICAL SOCIETY OF WASHINGTON,

AND THE AMERICAN ETHNOLOGICAL SOCIETY OF NEW YORK

PUBLICATION COMMITTEE

A. L. KROEBER, Chairman ex-officio; PLINY E. GODDARD, Secretary ex-officio;

HIRAM BINGHAM, STEWART CULIN, A. A. GOLDENWEISER,

G. B. GORDON, WALTER HOUGH, NEIL M. JUDD, F. W. HODGE,

BERTHOLD LAUFER, EDWARD SAPIR, M. H. SAVILLE, JOHN R.

SWANTON, A. M. TOZZER.

PLINY E. GODDARD, Editor, New York City

JOHN R. SWANTON and ROBERT H. LOWIE, Associate Editors

VOLUME 19

LANCASTER, PA., U. S. A.

PUBLISHED FOR

THE AMERICAN ANTHROPOLOGICAL ASSOCIATION

1917

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Page 3: Volume Information

CONTENTS OF VOLUME 19

ARTICLES PAGE

Ceremonial Friendship at Zufii. ELSIE CLEWS PARSONS........... I

Game Totems among the Northeastern Algonkians. FRANK G.

SPECK ................................................. 9 Variations in the Glenoid Fossae. Louis R. SULLIVAN ........... I9 The Place of Coiled Ware in Southwestern Pottery. EARL H.

MORRIS................................................. 24

A Prehistoric Wind-Instrument from Pecos, New Mexico. CHARLES PEABODY ............................. .......................... 30

Evidence of Circular Kivas in Western Utah Ruins. NEIL M. JUDD. 34 Similarities in Culture. W. D. WALLIS ........................ 41 De Soto's Route from Cofitachequi, in Georgia, to Cosa, in Alabama.

DANIEL MARSHALL ANDREWS ............................. 55

The Superorganic. A. L. KROEBER ................... .. .... I163 Some Archaeological Work in Porto Rico. HERMAN K. HAEBERLIN. 214

Further Notes on Human Remains from Vero, Florida. E. H. SELLARDS . ........... ....... ....... ............. .. .. ... 239

The Problem of Man's Antiquity at Vero, Florida. GEORGE GRANT

MACCURDY ..........o........... ................... 252 Edward B. Tylor. ROBERT H. LOWIE ........... ........ .. 262

Notes on the Pottery of Pecos. M. A. and A. V.' KIDDER (Plates

I-II) ................... ... ................. ..................325 Origin of the Word Shaman. BERTHOLD LAUFER ......... . 361 The Position of the Body in Aboriginal Interments in Western Massa-

chusetts. HARRIS HAWTHORNE WILDER and RALPH WHEATON

WHIPPLE .............. ...... ...................... 372 Restoration of a Cliff-Dweller. HARRIS HAWTHORNE WILDER..... 388

Iroquoian Clans and Phratries. C. M. BARBEAU............. .....392 Parallel between the Northwest Coast and Iroquoian Clans and

Phratries. C. M. BARBEAU............................... 403 Growth of the Nasal Bridge in Children. Louis- R. SULLIVAN.... 406 The Sio Shalako at the First Mesa, July 9, 1916. WALTER HOUGH

With Commentary by Dr. J. Walter Fewkes........ ..... 410

Some Anthropological Misconceptions. JOHN R. SWANTON ....... 459 iii

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Page 4: Volume Information

iv CONTENTS OF VOLUME r9

Certain Archaeological Investigations in Trinidad, British West Indies. THEODOOR DE BOOY. (Plates III-viII) ............... 471

A Pre-Lenape Culture in New Jersey. E. W. HAWKES and RALPH

LINTON. (Plates IX-xiv)................................. 487 Some Conclusions Based on Studies in Cerebral Anthropology. C.

W. M. POYNTER. (Plate xv) ............................ 495 Hawaiian Shark Aumakua. MARTHA WARREN BECKWITH ........ 503 The American Zodiac. STANSBURY HAGAR ................... . 518 Juan B. Ambrosetti. C. W. MEAD............................ 533

BOOK REVIEWS

TEGGART: Prolegomena to History (Kroeber).... ..................68 DIELS: Antike Technik. Sechs Vortrage (Laufer) ............... 71 MOOKERJI: Indian Shipping. A History of the Sea-Borne Trade

and Maritime Activity of the Indians from the Earliest Times

(Laufer).............................................. 75 PARMENTIER: Guide au

Mus&e de l'1cole francaise d'Extr8me-Orient

(Laufer) ............................... ............... 78 LAUFER: Chinese Clay Figures. Part I. Prolegomena on the His-

tory of Defensive Armor (Bishop) .......................... 80 DIXON: The Mythology of All Races. Vol. IX: Oceania (Lowie) .... 86 RIVERS: Kin, Kinship. Marriage, Introductory and Primitive.

Mother-Right (Lowie) .................................... 269 HOWLEY: The Beothucks or Red Indians, the Aboriginal Inhabitants

of Newfoundland (Speck) ................................. 272 MASPERO: Grammaire de la langue khmbre (cambodgien) (Laufer). 280 THOMAS: Anthropological Report on Sierra Leone. Specimens of

Language from Sierra Leone (Starr) ........................ 285 CUREAU: Savage Man in Central Africa (Starr) ................. 287 MEINHOF: An Introduction to the Study of African Languages

(Starr)...........................................o..... 288 LEUBA: The Belief in God and Immortality (Ogburn) ........... 416 JONES: Arboreal Man (Sullivan) .............................. 420 WEBSTER: Rest Days: A Study in Early Law and Morality (Parsons). 423 OBERMAIER: El Hombre F6sil (MacCurdy) ..................... 424 STEVENSON: Socio-Anthropometry (Cole)............ ........... 426 PARKER: The Constitution of The Five Nations (Hewitt)......... 429 SCOTT: Traditional History of The Confedracy of the Six Nations

(Hewitt) .................. ...........................

429 BEAUCHAMP: Civil, Religious and Mourning Councils and Cere-

monies of Adoption of the New York Indians (Hewitt)........ . 429

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Page 5: Volume Information

CONTENTS OF VOLUME xi V

ELLWOOD: An Introduction to Social Psychology (Haeberlin) ..... 542 BATES-STERNS: Harvard African Studies: Varia Africana I (Lowie). 546

BOAS: Tsimshian Mythology (Barbeau) ........................ 548 COLE: Traditions of the Tinguian: A Study in Philippine Folklore

(Dixon) ................................................ 563 WALLIS: The Development of the Human Chin (Oetteking) ....... 565

DISCUSSION AND CORRESPONDENCE

Misconceptions Concerning D6n6 Morphology-Remarks on Dr. Sapir's Would-be Corrigenda (A. G. Morice, O. M. I.), 132. Review of "A Pre-Lenape Site in New Jersey:" A Reply (Ralph Linton), 144. Indian Trap Pits on the Missouri (George Bird Grinnell), 148. Criticism of "Some Verendrye Enigmas" (George F. Will), 291. Moccasins (Laufer), 297. Comments on "The Place of Coiled Ware in Southwestern Pottery" (Agnes C. L. Donohugh), 301. "The Distribution of the Methods of Fire-Making:" A Reply (Walter Hough), 303. Do We Need a "Superorganic"? (E. Sapir),

441. The Autonomy of the Social (A. A. Goldenweiser), 447. The

Status of Washo (E. Sapir), 449. The Matrilineate Again (A. L.

Kroeber), 571. "Parallel between the Northwest Coast and Iro-

quoian Clans and Phratries" (Leo J. Frachtenberg), 579. The

Route of De Soto (John R. Swanton), 581. Ancient Indian Fire-

places in South Dakota Bad-Lands: Fact and Fancy (Melvin Ran-

dolph Gilmore), 583.

ANTHROPOLOGICAL NOTES

Mr. Holmes' Seventieth Anniversary, 149. The Meaning of "Tusayan,"

151. Geologic Society of London, 153. Mr. D. Jenness' Eskimo

studies, 153. Work of Miss Frances Densmore, 153. Return to

Washington of Dr. Leo Frachtenberg, 153. University of Virginia lectures by Dr. Ales Hrdli'ka, 153. Appointment of Mr. William

Hubbs Mechling, 153. Lectuies of Dr. F. C. Cole, 154. Work of

Dr. E. W. Gifford, 154. Appointment of Dr. E. W. Hawkes, 154. Withdrawal of land in Alaska by Executive Order, 154. With-

drawal of land in New Mexico by Executive Order, 154. Death of

Edward Burnett Tyler, 154. Work of Mr. John P. Harrington, 154. Announcement of Annual Meeting of the American Anthropological Association for 1917, 154. Petroglyphs on Kodiak Island, Alaska,

320. A Revival of the Ancient Hopi Pottery Art, 322. Appoint- ment of Dr. Robert H. Lowie, 323. Temporary cessation of the

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Page 6: Volume Information

Vi CONTENTS OF VOLUME z9

work at Pecos, 323. Joint expedition of the Bureau of Ethnology and the Museum of the American Indian to Hawikuh, 324. Field work of the Bureau of American Ethnology (Swanton, Hewitt, Michelson), 457. Field work of the U. S. National Museum (Hrd- liaka, Hough, Judd), 457, 458. Field work of the American Museum of Natural History (Morris, Nelson), 458. Degrees given by Har- vard to William H. Mechling, Carl E. Guthe, and N. Utsurikawa,

458. Temporary removal of specimens of Peabody Museum, Yale

University, 458. Death of William Wallace Tooker, 458. Field work of the Bureau of American Ethnology, (Harrington, Michel-

son), 589. Field work of the U. S. National Museum (Hrdliaka, Means), 589. Field work of the American Museum of Natural His-

tory (Spier), 589. Activity of the Anthropological Society of Phila-

delphia, 589. Removal of Heye North American Indian collection from Philadelphia, 589. Leave of absence granted G. B. Gordon, 590. H. U. Hall and H. W. Merwin of the Philadelphia Museum in

military service, 59o. University of Pennsylvania's lectures on

"History of Religion," 590. Field work of the Commercial Museum of Philadelphia, 590. A. M. Tozzer in military service, 590. Dedi- cation of new State Museum at Santa F6, N. M., 590. W. C. Farabee acting as Secretary of the American Anthropological Asso-

ciation, 59o. Death of Joseph T. Goodman, 591. Death of Horace Edwin Hayden, 591. Election of Christopher Wren, 591. Appoint- ment of Debenedetti as successor to Ambrosetti, 591. L'6cole d'anthropologie de Paris opens its 42nd year, 591. Death of Teobert Maler, 591.

Anthropology at the New York meeting with Proceedings of the American Anthropological Association for 1916............. 91

Constitution of the American Anthropological Association ....... Ioi Constitution of the American Ethnological Society .............. 107 Proceedings of the American Ethnological Society .............. I15 American Anthropological Association, Officers and Members for

1917.......... ...................... ................ 155 Proceedings of the Anthropological Society of Washington ........ 304 Proceedings of the American Ethnological Society, Inc.......... 451 Proceedings of the Anthropological Society of Washington ....... 586 Index to Authors and Titles .............................. 492

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