. Annual report of the Bureau of American Ethnology to the Secretary of the Smithsonian Institution. a bushel) of the scatophagicshells already noted. The gravesremote from pebbly beaches are marked by heaps of cholla stems andbranches, rudely thatched with miscellaneous brambles roughly pinned MS in the .irchives of the Burt^au of American Etlinologj. A somewhat more obscure Teraion wasrecorded Haleiu The Iroquois Hook Kites: Now, there ia another thin^ we say, we youngerbrothers. He who has worked for us lias ooue afar off: and be also will in time take with him allthese—the whole body o


. Annual report of the Bureau of American Ethnology to the Secretary of the Smithsonian Institution. a bushel) of the scatophagicshells already noted. The gravesremote from pebbly beaches are marked by heaps of cholla stems andbranches, rudely thatched with miscellaneous brambles roughly pinned MS in the .irchives of the Burt^au of American Etlinologj. A somewhat more obscure Teraion wasrecorded Haleiu The Iroquois Hook Kites: Now, there ia another thin^ we say, we youngerbrothers. He who has worked for us lias ooue afar off: and be also will in time take with him allthese—the whole body of warrioi\s and also the whole body of women—they will go with him. Butit is still harder when the woin;ni sluiU die, because with her the line is lost. And also the grand-children and the little ones who are running around—these ho will take .away; and also those thatare creeping on the ground, and also those tbat are on the cradle-boards; all these be will take awaywith him. (Brintons Library of Aboriginal American Literature, number ll, 1883, pti. 141-143.) GRAVE CAIRNS OF TIBURON 289*. together by okatilla steins, tlie shocks being sometimes nearly as high and broad as the jacales. A few of the scatophagic shells were found about the bramble marked graves at Pozo Escalaute, and a single one at Barranca Saliua. In geueial the association of cemeteries and ran- cherias, or of graves and jacales, indicates that habitations are usually abandoned for a time when a death occurs within or near them. The mostcouspicUouscairn seen in Serilandwas well within Tibu-ron. It stands on thesouthern side of a littleroek-butte about a mileand a half east-south-east of Tinaja Anita,south of the main ar-royo, and near wherethe trail from the tinajabifurcates toward Ar-royoCarrizal aud PuntaNarragansett, resiiec-tively. It is shadowed by a notably large and widespreading paloverde, and is in the form ofa cone estimated at 7 feet in height and 18 or 20 feet across the materials, a


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Keywords: ., bookcentury1800, bookdecade1890, booksubjectindians, bookyear1895