| Smithsonian Institution. Bureau of American Ethnology - 1896 - 902 strani
...— so that it was necessary to make piles of bones and cow dung now and then, so that the rear guard could follow the army. The grass never failed to become...was short, it was as fresh and straight as before. Another tiling was a heap of cow boues, a crossbow shot long, or a very little less, almost twice a... | |
| George Parker Winship - 1896 - 452 strani
...но that it was necessary to make piles of bones and cow dung now and then, so that the rear guard could follow the army. The grass never failed to become erect after it hud been trodden down, and, although it was short, it was as fresh and straight as before. Another... | |
| Woodbury Lowery - 1901 - 560 strani
...sees absolutely nothing about one but the sky and the plain." "Who could believe," says Castafieda,' " that a thousand horses, and five hundred of our cows,...was short, it was as fresh and straight as before." The Spaniards had pursued a south-easterly course until the crossing of the Pecos, and then had turned... | |
| Pedro Reyes Castañeda - 1904 - 308 strani
...— so that it was necessary to make piles of bones and cow dung now and then, so that the rear guard could follow the army. The grass never failed to become...was short, it was as fresh and straight as before. Another thing was a heap of cow bones, a crossbow shot long, or a very little less, almost twice a... | |
| Francisco Vásquez de Coronado - 1904 - 300 strani
...— so that it was necessary to make piles of bones and cow dung now and then, so that the rear guard could follow the army. The grass never failed to become...was short, it was as fresh and straight as before. Another thing was a heap of cow bones, a crossbow shot long, or a very little less, almost twice a... | |
| 1907 - 512 strani
...so that it was necessary to make piles of bones / and cow-dung now and then, so that the rear guard could follow the army. The grass never failed to become...was short, it was as fresh and straight as before. Another thing was a heap of cow bones, a crossbow shot long, or a very little less, almost twice a... | |
| Herbert Eugene Bolton - 1921 - 368 strani
...its solitude, for it wiped out their trails as the sea obliterates the mark of the keel. Castaneda exclaims, wonderingly: "Who could believe that a thousand...Most important of all, the Teyas guides told Coronado th^t Quivira was north, not east. Coronado therefore ordered the main body, under Arellano, back to... | |
| Herbert Eugene Bolton - 1921 - 344 strani
...could believe that a thousand horses and five hundred of our cows, and more than five thousand ranis and ewes, and more than fifteen hundred friendly Indians...Turco's tales had been disproved that he traveled m irons. Food and water became scarce. Most important of all, the Teyas guides told Coronado that Quivira... | |
| John Collier, Ira Moskowitz - 1995 - 262 strani
...that it was necessary to make piles of bones and buffalo-dung now and then, so that the rear guard could follow the army. The grass never failed to become...was short, it was as fresh and straight as before. But we are digressing from Castenada's observations of the Pueblos, and Coronado's actions there. Cicuye... | |
| Duane F. Guy - 2001 - 250 strani
...is very short, a span or less." He also noted that as the large expedition traveled over the plains: "The grass never failed to become erect after it had...was short, it was as fresh and straight as before." Obviously, if taller grasses were present in any appreciable amounts on the plains, the grass would... | |
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