Casa Grande, Arizona

Sprednja platnica
U.S. Government Printing Office, 1912 - 155 strani
 

Vsebina

Druge izdaje - Prikaži vse

Pogosti izrazi in povedi

Priljubljeni odlomki

Stran 3 - Permit me to express my appreciation of your aid in the work under my charge. Very respectfully, yours, WH HOLMES, Chief. Dr. CHARLES D. WALCOTT, Secretary' of the Smithsonian Institution.
Stran 63 - ... timber were discovered; on the contrary, the sleepers of the ground floor were round and unhewn. They were burnt out of their seats in the wall to the depth of six inches. The whole interior of the house had been burnt out, and the walls much defaced. What was left bore marks of having been glazed, and on the wall in the north room of the second story were traced the following hieroglyphics.
Stran 63 - About the time of the noon halt, a large pile, which seemed the work of human hands, was seen to the left. It was the remains of a three-story mud house, sixty feet square, pierced for doors and windows. The walls were four feet thick, and formed by layers of mud two feet thick.
Stran 303 - Catalogue of linguistic manuscripts in the library of the Bureau of Ethnology, by James C. Pilling. P. 553-577. Illustration of the method of recording Indian languages. From the manuscripts of Messrs. JO Dorsey, AS Gatschet, and SR Riggs. P. 579-589. Index. P. 591-603. Second annual report of the Bureau of Ethnology to the secretary of the Smithsonian Institution 1880-81 by JW Powell director [Vignette] Washington Government Printing Office 1883 [1884] Roy.
Stran 65 - it was built by the son of the most beautiful woman who once dwelt in yon mountain ; she was fair and all the handsome men came to court her, but in vain; when they came, they paid tribute, and out of this small store, she fed all people in times of famine, and it did not diminish; at last, as she lay asleep, a drop of rain fell upon her navel, and she became pregnant, and brought forth a boy, who was the builder of all these houses.
Stran i - LXVI-LXXIX, fig. 47-48. Index to part 2. P. 1139-1160. Twentieth annual report of the Bureau of American Ethnology to the secretary of the Smithsonian Institution 1898-99 by JW Powell director [Vignette] Washington Government Printing Office 1903 Roy.
Stran 88 - ... Grande, or directly between the main building and the west wall of the compound, there were excavated several rooms, H, I, and J, the walls of which are low and singlestoried. One of these rooms, J, is situated on the northwest corner of the ruin, and has its west wall continuous with that which forms the retaining wall of the north terrace. There are also two rooms on the southwestern corner which bear the same relation to the terrace wall of the south side. These two are separated by a court...
Stran 302 - On the evolution of language, as exhibited in the specialization of the grammatic processes, the differentiation of the parts of speech, and the integration of the sentence; from a study of Indian languages, by JW Powell. P. 1-16. Sketch of the mythology of the North American Indians, by JW Powell. P. 17-5C. Wyandot government: a short study of tribal society, by JW Powell.
Stran 20 - Leary, who was able to bring the accessioning and cataloguing of books, pamphlets, and periodicals up to date. In all, there have been received and recorded during the year 760 volumes, 1,200 pamphlets, and the current issues of upward of 500 periodicals, while about 500 volumes have been bound at the Government Printing Office. The library now contains 13,657 volumes, 9,800 pamphlets, and several thousand copies of periodicals which relate to anthropology. The purchase of books and periodicals has...
Stran 302 - Bulletin 30 was ordered in an edition of 6,500 copies, of which 4,000 were for the use of the House of Representatives, 2,000 for the use of the Senate, and 500 for the use of the Bureau of American Ethnology.

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