. Bulletin. Ethnology. BULL. 30] COPS CORA 347. KWAKIUTL CER E MO Copper; length INCHES. (boas) The Antiquarian, i, 1897; Nadaillac, Pre- hist. Amer., 1884; Niblack in Nat. Mus. Eep. 1888, 1890; Packard in Am. Antiq., XV, no. 2, 1893"; Patterson in Nova Scotia Inst, of Sci., VII, 1888-89; Putnam (1) in Peabody Mus. Eeps., XVI, 1884, (2) in Proc. A. A. A. S., XLiv, 1896; Rau (1) Archieol. Coll. Nat. Mus., 1876, (2) in Smithson. Rep. 1872, 1873; Revnolds in Am. Anthrop.', i, no. 4, 1888; Schoolcraft, Ind. Tribes, 1,1851; Short, N. Am. of Antiquity, 1880; Slaf- ter, Prehist. Copper Impl.,187


. Bulletin. Ethnology. BULL. 30] COPS CORA 347. KWAKIUTL CER E MO Copper; length INCHES. (boas) The Antiquarian, i, 1897; Nadaillac, Pre- hist. Amer., 1884; Niblack in Nat. Mus. Eep. 1888, 1890; Packard in Am. Antiq., XV, no. 2, 1893"; Patterson in Nova Scotia Inst, of Sci., VII, 1888-89; Putnam (1) in Peabody Mus. Eeps., XVI, 1884, (2) in Proc. A. A. A. S., XLiv, 1896; Rau (1) Archieol. Coll. Nat. Mus., 1876, (2) in Smithson. Rep. 1872, 1873; Revnolds in Am. Anthrop.', i, no. 4, 1888; Schoolcraft, Ind. Tribes, 1,1851; Short, N. Am. of Antiquity, 1880; Slaf- ter, Prehist. Copper Impl.,1879; Squier, An- tiq. of N. Y. and the West, 1851; Squier and Davis, Ancient Monu- ments, 1848; Starr, First Steps in Human Progress, 1895; Strachey (1585), Hist. Va., Hakluvt Soc. Publ., VIII, 1843; Thomas in 12th'Rep. B. A. E., 1894; Whittlesey, Ancient MiningonLake Superior, Smithson. Cont., xiii, 1863; Willoughbv in Am. Anthrop., v, no. 1, 1903; Wilson, Prehist. Man, 1862; Win- chell in Engin. and Min. Jour., xxxii, Sept. 17, 1881. (w. n. h.) Cops. A former Papago rancheria vis- ited by Kino and Mange in 1699; situated w. of the Rio San Pedro, probably in the vicinity of the present town of Arivaca, s. ^\. of Tubac, s. Ariz. Cops.—Mange (1701) quoted bv Bancroft, Ariz, and N. Mex., , 18S9. ^Mange, ibid. Copway, George {Kar/'igegabo, 'he who stands forever.'—W. J.). A young Chip- pewa chief, born near the mouth of Trent r., Ontario, in the fall of 1818. His pa- rents were Chippewa, and his father, until his conversion, was a medicine-man. George was educated in Illinois, and after acquiring considerable knowledge in English books returned to his people as a Wesleyan missionary. For many years he was connected with the press of New York city and lectured extensively in Europe and the United States, but he is noted chiefly as one of the few Indian authors. Among his published writings are: The Life, History, and Travels of Kah-ge-ga-gah-bowh ((jeorge Copwav), Alban


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