OCR Text |
Show Notes 1. W. W. Hill, "Navajo Trading and Trading Ritual: A Study in Cultural Dynamics," Southwestern Journal of Anthropology 4 (1948):380. 2. Kenneth Ames, Beyond Necessity: Art in the Folk Tradition (New York: W. W. Norton, 1977), p. 20. 3- George Kubler, The Shape of Time (New Haven & London: Yale University Press, 1962) p. 1. 4. Rex E. Madsen, comp., and Watson Smith and Kathleen Gratz, eds., Prehistoric Ceramics of the Fremont, Museum of Northern Arizona Ceramic Series, no. 6 (Flagstaff: Museum of Northern Arizona, 1977), p. v. 5. Dee C. Taylor, Two Fremont Sites and Their Position in Southwestern Prehistory, University of Utah Anthropological Papers, no. 29 (Salt Lake City: University of Utah Press, 1957). 6. Nuwuvi: A Southern Paiute History (Reno: Intertribal Council, 1976). 7. Isabel T. Kelley, Southern Paiute Ethnology, University of Utah Anthropological Papers, no. 69 (Salt Lake City: University of Utah Press, 1964), pp. 1-65. 8. Joseph G. Jorgensen, "The Ethno-history and Acculturation of the Northern Utes" (Ph.D. Dissertation, University of Indiana, 1965), p. 14. It is possible that some Ute groups had the horse by the mid-seventeenth century. 9. Hill, p. 377. 10. Kelley, p. 33. 11. Floyd A. O'Neil, "A History of the Ute Indians of Utah until 1890," (Ph.D. dissertation, University of Utah, 1973). Fur trappers and traders from the Hispanic colonies of New Mexico were established in the Uintah Basin by the 1830s and were undoubtedly trading with the Utes. 12. Julian H. Steward, "A Uintah Ute Bear Dance," American Anthropologist 34 (1932):265. 13. Kelley, p. 59, quoting Frederick S. Dellenbaugh, "Kaibab Paiute," ms. 14. U.S., Washington, D.C., National Archives, Social and Economic Branch, Indian Record, Unratified Treaty Files, Treaty Negotiations Ute-U.S. Govt., Spanish Fork, Utah, June 1865; quoted in O'Neil. 15. Floyd A. O'Neil and Kathryn MacKay, A History of the Uintah-Ouray Ute Lands, American West Center Occasional Paper no. 10 (Salt Lake City: American West Center, 1978). Another Ute group, the Ute Mountain Utes, consisted mostly of the Weeminuche Utes at the time of settlement on the Ute Mountain Reservation. 16. Gottfried O. Lang, A Study in Culture Contact and Culture Change: The Whiterocks Utes in Transition, University of Utah Anthropological Papers, no. 15 (Salt Lake City: University of Utah Press, 1953), p. 53. 17. Ibid., p. 3. Perhaps this student encountered a natural resistance to telling past Ute events to a white man. Ann Elizabeth Nelson. Curator of Collections, Utah Museum of Natural History. Graduate of the Colorado College and the museum program of the Smithsonian Institution. 21 |