The Salish People: Volume IV. Charles Hill-Tout

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The Salish People: Volume IV - Charles Hill-Tout

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pp. 472–549

      [13] “The Origin of the Totemism of the Aborigines of British Columbia” Transactions of the Royal Society of Canada 2nd series, 7 (1901) Sect. II pp. 3–15

      [14] “America: Ethnography” Man 1 (1901) pp. 164–165 [being a summary of the report of the Ethnological Survey of Canada, and an abstract of the paper on the “Mainland Halkomelem”]

      [15] “Curious and Interesting Marriage Customs of Some of the Aboriginal Tribes of British Columbia” American Antiquarian 24 (1902) pp. 85–88 [material from the Ethnological Survey reports of 1899 and 1900]

      [16] “Communal Houses in British Columbia” American Antiquarian 24(1902) p.107

      [17] “Ethnological Studies of the Mainland Halkomelem, a Division of the Salish of British Columbia” Report of the British Association for the Advancement of Science 72 (1902) pp. 355–449

      [18] “Earlier Home of the Bella Coola Tribe” American Antiquarian 24 (1902) pp. 403–404 [from Report (1902)]

      [19] “Kitchen Middens on the Lower Eraser” American Antiquarian 25 (1903) pp. 180–182 [material from the British Association 1902 report]

      [20] “Totemism: A Consideration of its Origin and Import” Transactions of the Royal Society of Canada 2nd series, 9 (1903) Sect. II pp. 61–99

      [21] “Indians and Their Traditions” in Vancouver, British Columbia: The Sunset Doorway of the Dominion (Vancouver Tourist Association 1903) n.p.

      [22] “Report on the Ethnology of the Siciatl of British Columbia, a Coast Division of the Salish Stock” Journal of the Royal Anthropological Institute 34 (January-July 1904) pp. 20–91

      [23] “Ethnological Report on the Stseelis and Skaulits Tribes of the Halkomelem Division of the Salish of British Columbia” Journal of the Royal Anthropological Institute 34 (July-December 1904) pp. 311–376

      [24] “Report on the Ethnology of the Stlatlumh of British Columbia” Journal of the Royal Anthropological Institute 35 (January-June 1905) pp. 126–218

      [25] “Some Features of the Language and Culture of the Salish” American Anthropologist n.s. 7 (1905) pp. 674–687

      [26] “The Salish Tribes of the Coast and Lower Eraser Delta” in Annual Archaeological Report 1905 ["being part of Appendix to the Report of The Minister of Education Ontario"] (Toronto 1906) pp. 225–235 [= item 10 of “Ethnology of Canada and Newfoundland” edited by Franz Boas]

      [27] “Report on the Ethnology of the South-Eastern Tribes of Vancouver Island, British Columbia” Journal of the Royal Anthropological Institute 37 (July-December 1907) pp. 306–374

      [28] The Native Races of the British Empire. British North America. I. The Far West, the Home of the Salish and Dene London: Archibald Constable and Company 1907 (263 pp., 33 pi.) [Reviewed by A. F. Chamberlain in American Anthropologist n.s. 9 (1907) pp. 602–604]

      [29] “Report on the Ethnology of the Okanaken of British Columbia, an Interior Division of the Salish Stock" Journal of the Royal Anthropological Institute 41 (January-June 1911) pp. 130–161

      [30] “Neolithic Man in British Columbia” [abstract only] American Journal of Archaeology 16 (1912) pp. 102–103

      [31] “Government Aid to Agriculture” Papers and Proceedings of the Canadian Political Science Association 1 (1913) pp. 20–26

      [32] “The Native Races of British Columbia” chapter XVIII of eds. F. W. Howay and E. O. S. Scholefield British Columbia from the Earliest Times to the Present Vol. I (Vancouver 1914) pp. 573–591 [same material as his book of 1907]

      [33] “Our Forerunners in British Columbia” Journal [of the Art, Historical and Scientific Association] (Vancouver, 1917) pp. 18–31

      [34] “Foreword” to Lionel Haweis Tsoqalem, the Cowichan Monster Vancouver: Citizen Printing and Publishing Co. 1918 [A ballad based on a Cowichan tale collected by Hill-Tout]

      [35] “The Phylogeny of Man from a New Angle” Transactions of the Royal Society of Canada 15 (1921) Sect. II pp. 47–82

      [36] “Recent Discoveries and New Trends in Anthropology” Transactions of the Royal Society of Canada 17 (1923) Sect. II pp.1–27 [Presidential Address]

      [37] Man and His Ancestors in the Light of Organic Evolution Van-ouver: Cowan Brookhouse Limited 1925

      [38] “Some Recent Phases and Trends in Anthropology” Museum Notes 3 (December 1928) pp. 19–23

      [39] “The Story of the Most Unique Fossil Beds Known to Science” Museum and Art Notes 4 (March 1929) pp. 11–16

      [40] “Myth of Salmon Coming to Squamish Waters” Museum and Art Notes 4 (June 1929) pp. 62–64 [From British Association Report of 1900 p. 581]

      [41] “Indian Masks and What They Signify” Museum and Art Notes 4 (September 1929) pp. 91–93

      [42] “Is There a Fundamental Difference in Racial Aptitudes and Capacities, and Does the Mind of the Savage Differ Essentially from That of the Savant?” Museum and Art Notes 4 (December 1929) pp. 149–157

      [43] “The Great Fraser Midden” Museum and Art Notes 5 (September 1930) pp. 75–83

      [44] “Prehistoric Burial Mounds of British Columbia” Museum and Art Notes 5 (December 1930) pp. 120–126

      [45] “Recent Developments in Anthropology ”Museum and Art Notes 6 (March 1931) pp. 14–22

      [46] “British Columbian Ancestors of the Eskimo? Interesting Discoveries in the Prehistoric Kitchen Middens of British Columbia, 1932” Illustrated London News (16 January 1932) pp. 90–92

      [47] “Vancouver Two Thousand Years Ago” Vancouver Province (17 January 1932) p. 1

      [48] “A Unique Native Carving” Museum and Art Notes 1 (June 1932) pp. 3–5

      [49] Monuments of the Past in British Columbia, a pamphlet published to “commemorate the Meeting of the Fifth Pacific Science Congress at Vancouver, B.C.” June 1933 [= Museum and Art Notes Vol. VII Supplement No. 5 (June 1933)]

      [50] “Revelations of the Stone Age in North America: Relics on Old Indian Camp-sites in the Middle Columbia River Region, Astoundingly Rich Artifacts” Illustrated London News (20 October 1934) pp. 608–611

      [51] “The ‘Moses Coulee’ Pipe” Transactions of the Royal Society of Canada 29 (1935) Sect. II pp. 219–224

      [52] “The Art of the ‘Wolves of the Sea’” Illustrated London News (15 August 1936) pp. 287–289

      [53] An Address Given at Marpole on the Formal Presentation of the Midden Cairn to the City by His Honour Judge Howay [1 May 1938] — issued as a pamphlet with the title The Great Fraser Midden

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