164 Inhabited Cave, Showing Store-houses,
Inclosure, and Extended Floor, 165 Cave with Wooden Ladder Leading
to a Store-room, 169 Crosses Made from the Natural Growth of
Pine-trees in Front of Tarahumare House, 172 Crosses in Front of
Tarahumare House, 173 Cross, 174 Tarahumare Store-house of Stones
and Mud, 175 Caves Used as Store-houses, 176 Tarahumare
Store-houses Made of Logs, 178 Cactus Flowers, 179 Making Larvae
Ready for the Pot, 182 Gathering Pithaya, 188 In the Highlands of the
Sierra, 194 Tarahumare Interpreters, 201 Indian Trail Cut in a Ridge of
Tuff, 202 Pecking on Rock in the Neighbourhood of Norogachic, 203
Tarahumare Girl from the Neighbourhood of Norogachic, 205 Pecking
on Rock in the Neighbourhood of Norogachic, 207 Winter Morning in
the Sierra, 209 Dogs of Chihuahua, 216 Tarahumare Girdles, 219
Aspect of the Tarahumare Country in Humarisa, 227 Taking My
Baggage Down an Indian Trail in the Barranca de San Carlos, 231
Tarahumare Woman, 236 Tarahumare Man, 237 Usual Crouching
Position of the Tarahumare, 238 Tarahumare Man, 239 Tarahumares
Sunning Themselves, 240 Tarahumare Girl. The Hair Worn in Mexican
Fashion, 242 Weaving a Girdle, 249 Patterns of Tarahumare Belts, 249
Woman Pottery Maker and Some Results of Her Labour, 250
Tarahumare Pottery from Panalachic, 252 Basket for Straining Tesvino,
254 Tarahumare Blanket, 259 A Tarahumare Call, 260 Tarahumare
Arrow Release, 262 Tarahumare Baskets, 263 Tarahumare Girl
Carrying Water, 265 Tarahumare, Showing Mode of Wearing Blanket,
268 Tarahumare Blankets, 274 Stone Disk for Playing, 277 Sticks Used
by Tepehuanes for Playing, 278 Value of the Different Sides of a
Knuckle-bone, 278 Tarahumares Playing Quinze, 279 Cross Marking
the Track of the Foot-runners, 283 Tarahumares Racing by Torch-light,
285 Making Wagers at a Foot-race, 288 Part of Tarahumare Rattling
Belt, 290 Tarahumare Foot-runners, Photographed after the Race, 291
Tarahumare Women Crossing a Stream in Their Race, 293 Fork and
Wooden Ball Used in Women's Game, 294 Stick and Ring Used in
Women's Game, 294 The Coyote, Canis Latrans, 303 Tarahumare
Shaman's Rattles, 313 Rubio, the Shaman, 316 Rubio, the Shaman, and
His Wife at Home in Their Cave, 319 Shaman Rubio's Cave, Seen from
the Outside, 320 Rubio, the Shaman, Examining a Man Accused of
Sorcery, 324 Trepanned Tarahumare Skull, Female, 328 The Beginning
of the Rutuburi and the Yumari Dance, 335 Dancing Yumari, 341
Sacrificing Tesvino after a Yumari Dance, 345 Ready to Begin Eating
and Drinking after a Night's Dancing of Rutuburi, 349 Echinocactus,
357 Hikuli or Peyote, the principal sacred cacti, 358 Dry Hikuli, 359
Shaman's Notched Stick, 366 Ancient Notched Sticks, 366 Tarahumare
Women Dancing Hikuli at Guajochic Station, 369 Mammilaria
fissurata, 373 Shaman Rubio and His Company at a Hikuli Feast.
Photographed after a Night's Singing and Dancing, 376 Tarahumare
Medicine Figure, Mexico, 378 Ancient Ritualistic Petrograph, Arizona,
378 Mourning, 380 View from the North across Barranca de San
Carlos, near Guachochic, 392 Barranca de San Carlos, in its Upper Part,
395 One of My Companions in Barranca de San Carlos, 397 The
Widow Grinding Corn in Her Camp, 399 Bow and Throwing-stick for
the Fish-spear, 401 The Amole, a Species of Agave, 402 Tarahumares
on the Rio Fuerte Fishing with Their Blankets, 405 Pinus Lumholtzii,
409 Civilised Tarahumare Boy, 417 Juan Ignacio and His Son, Pagan
Tarahumares, 419 A Tepehuane Family, 423 Old Log-houses near
Nabogame, 424 Tepehuanes from Nabogame, 427 Tepehuane Medicine
Lodge near Mesa de Milpillas, 432 A Well-known Tepehuane Shaman,
434 Salvia elegans, var. sonorensis, 438 The Flower-spike of the
Amole, 439 _Cereus cæspitosus_, 440 Tubar Man, 442 Tubar Women,
443 Beads of Burnt Clay, from Tubar Tombs, 444 Tepehuane Sling
made from Maguey Fibre, 458 Tepehuane Pouch made from Maguey
Fibre, 459 Tepehuane Store-house, near Lajas, 461 The Musical Bow
of the Tepehuanes of the South, and of the Aztecs, 475 Rattle for Ankle,
made from Empty Pods of a Palm, 477 Cora Men and Women from
Santa Teresa, 489 Cora Pouch, of Unusual Shape, made of Wool.
Patterns represent Flying Birds and a row of Deer, 492 Cora Indians
from Mesa del Nayarit, 501 The Sacred Dancing-place of the Coras,
called Towta, the supposed residence of the great Taquat of the East of
the same name. Photographed after the Dancing was over, 517 God's
Eye, made by the Cora Tribe as a Prayer for My Health and Life, 521
COLOURED PLATES
PLATES I., II., III., IV. Pottery from San Diego at end of volume
PLATE V. Pottery from San Diego and Casas Grandes at end of
volume PLATE VI. A Tarahumare Beauty _facing page 266_
UNKNOWN MEXICO
Chapter I
Preparations for the Start--Our Dry Goods Relished by the Cattle--I
Become a "Compadre"--Beautiful Northern Sonora--Mexican
Muleteers Preferable in Their Own Country--Apache Stories--Signs of
Ancient Inhabitants--Arrival at Upper Yaqui River--Opata Indians now
Mexicanised--A Flourishing Medical Practice--Mexican
Manners--Rock-carvings--How Certain Cacti Propagate.
Heavy floods
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