North American Indians of the Plains . 69 Pipe and Tobacco Bags. Dakota 70 Strike-a-light Pouch. Arapaho 72 Boiling with Hot Stones in a Paunch Supported by Sticks. Black-foot 75 Buffalo Horn Spoon 76 10 INDI \\> OF I ill. PLAINS PAGE. Bone Knife 80 A Buffalo Hide Shield from the Northern Blackfoot . 83 The Cheyenne Camp Circle 90 A Dog Dancer. Hidatsa 95 Dance of the Bull Society. Mandan «>7 Headdress of Buffalo Skin, Arapaho Womens Society ... 98 A Blackfool War Record LOO Medicine-pipe and Bundle Ill A Bundle and Contents. Arapaho 112 Arapaho Sun Dance, Model in the Museum 11) Digging


North American Indians of the Plains . 69 Pipe and Tobacco Bags. Dakota 70 Strike-a-light Pouch. Arapaho 72 Boiling with Hot Stones in a Paunch Supported by Sticks. Black-foot 75 Buffalo Horn Spoon 76 10 INDI \\> OF I ill. PLAINS PAGE. Bone Knife 80 A Buffalo Hide Shield from the Northern Blackfoot . 83 The Cheyenne Camp Circle 90 A Dog Dancer. Hidatsa 95 Dance of the Bull Society. Mandan «>7 Headdress of Buffalo Skin, Arapaho Womens Society ... 98 A Blackfool War Record LOO Medicine-pipe and Bundle Ill A Bundle and Contents. Arapaho 112 Arapaho Sun Dance, Model in the Museum 11) Digging Stick and Case for Blackfoot Sun Dance Bundle . 117 Sun Dance Headdress. Blackfoot 118 Peyote Button 121 Types of Designs on Moccasins 127 Design Elements, Bead and Quill Embroidery .... 128 Arapaho Moccasin with Symbolic Decoration 129 Painted Designs on a Womans Robe. Dakota .... 131 Blanket Band in Quills. Blackfoot WS Teton-Dakota and (row Types 140 Cheyenne and Pawnee Types 141 Blackfoot and Wind River Shoshoni Types 142. Culture Areas in North America. The divisions marked on this map are not absolute but can a tribe be found anywhere that does not share some of thecultural traits of all its immediate neighbors. Yet, certain groups oftribes often have highly characteristic traits in common; hence, theyare said to be of the same general culture type. Thus the tribes dis-cussed in this book have a number of peculiar traits whose distributionin more or less complete association is taken as indicating the geographi-cal extent of a type of culture. The fact that these boundaries almost 11 L2 INDIANS OPl ill. PLAINS coincide with the Limits of the tied.— prairies and plains and thaithis culture i- most intensified among tin- tribes Living in the GreatPlains, has given rise to the term Plains area. In the same way otherparts of the continent appear as the homes of peculiar culture generally recognize at least eleven Buch area- whoseappro


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Keywords: ., bookcentury1900, bookdecade1920, booksubjectindiansofnorthameric