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Show LEADING FACTS OF NEW MEXICAN 50 HISTORY de NavZuni name for the Navaj6, who were designated Apaches | Mexico. aju by the early Spaniards in New question beyond were *? Comanches the and The Apaches, Navajés, with the Pueblos, the people whose constant and relentless warfare of many of nment abando did much to accomplish the overthrow and ions. their great communal habitat was not Necessarily the destruction of these houses and pueblos many by believed is it accomplished in a brief period of time, but permaof remains the of chain n scientists that the almost unbroke degrees nent aboriginal structures, extending from the north forty d by latitude to the thirty-second parallel, was at one time inhabite by ted oblitera y partiall and hed vanquis a race or races which were north. the from tribes y predator and s, barbarou the war-like, BIBLIOGRAPHY Bancroft, H. H. Bandelier, A. F. Native Races, Investigations i, 1886. among the Indians of the western United States, Final Rep. the Arch. Inst. of Am., part ii. South- Papers Report of the Ruin of the Pueblo of Pecos. Papers of the Arch. Inst. of Am., American Series, 1, 1062, Historical Introduction, Arch. Inst. of Am., 1881. Investigations, ibid, 1882. Bureau of Ethnology American Historical Archives of the Hemenway 8S. W. Arch. Ez., Berlin, 1890. Documentary History of the Zuni Tribe. Journal of Am. Eth. and Archae., vol. iii, 1892. 2nd Annual Report, ii, Catalogue of the Collection obtained from the Indians of New Mexico and Arizona, 1879-1880, Stephenson. 38rd Annual Report, Illustrated Catalogue of the Collection obtained from the pueblos of Zuni, New Mexico and Walpi, Arizona, 1881, Ibid. 4th Annual Report, Pottery of the Ancient Pueblos, Holmes. 8th Annual Report, A study of Pueblo Architec- ture, Tusayan and Cibola, v, Mindeleff. 17th Annual Report, Archeological Expedition Arizona in 1895, Fewkes. 22nd Annual Report, Two Pueblo Ruins, Fewkes. Moqui Basket Bourke, and Pottery Cushing, 82'The Comanche are of Shoshonean stock, and the only one of t . clon that lived entirely upon the plains. Their language and traditions sI ow they are a comparatively recent off-shoot from the Shoshoni of Wyoml ng, both tribes speaking practically the same dialect and, until very recently, keepi7s up constant and friendly communication. Within the traditionary period the two tribes lived adjacent to each other in southern Wyoming, since which time the Shoshoni have been beaten back into the mountains by the Sioux rier prairie tribes, while the Comanche have been driven steadily southward 0 Same pressure. from ‘th oo. The Kiowa i i ee say that when they ‘oemaia en ee moved dary southward of the of g. 1890. F. H. Abert Hewett, Edgar work in the 24th Annual Report, Work in Mound Exploration, Thomas. Navajé6 Legends. Journal Am. Folk Lore, iii, th Emory, Summers’ to Cooke L. Preliminary Notes on the Hemenway Expedition. Rep. of Congress of Americanists, Berlin, 1890. Notes of a Military Reconnoissance, etc., New Mexico and California, Washington, 1848. The Archeology of Pajarito Park, Pre. Rep., Am. Anthropologist, 1904. Studies on Extinct Pueblos1904of Pecos, Am. An- thropologist, ea set ci ee Bul. of the Jemez-Plateau, saree The Pajaritan The Excavations Culture, American Archeology, at of the Papers iii, 1909. El. Rito de Los BD. oc, re A. H., School Poe of Frijoles, m |