Chiricahua and Mescalero Apache Texts | ||
Notes to the Introduction
[_]
1. M. E. Opler "An outline of Chiricahua Apache Social
Organization" in F. Eggan (ed.), Social Anthropology of North American
tribes (Chicago, 1937), p. 174.[_]
3. "Western Apache" is a collective name given to five
distinct ethnic groups living in east central Arizona. I have linquistic
data on only one of these groups--the San Carlos---but it seems certain that
the other four (i.e., the White Mountain, Cibecue, Northern Tonto, and
Southern Tonto) do not differ radically from San Carlos. For an account of
the distribution and range of the Western Apache see Grenville Goodwin, "The
Social Divisions and Economic Life of the Western Apache," American
Anthropologist, Vol XXXVII (1935), No. 1, pp, 55-64.[_]
4. H. Hoijer, "The Southern Athapaskan Languages," American
Anthropologist, Vol. XL (1938), No. 1.[_]
5. Franciscan Fathers, A Vocabulary of the Navaho Language (2
vols.; St. Michaels, Arizona, 1912); An Ethnologic Dictionary of the Navaho
Language (St. Michaels, Arizona, 1910); and Fr. Berard Haile, A Manual of
Navaho Grammar (St. Michaels, Arizona, 1926).[_]
6. P. E. Goddard, Navaho Texts, "Anthropological Papers,
American Museum of Natural History," Vol. XXXIV (New York, 1933), No.
1. Chiricahua and Mescalero Apache Texts | ||