Chapter 17

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FOOTNOTES:[1]His sudden death in August, 1910, is a very great loss to Chile.[2]Mr. Thomas Barbour, of the Museum of Comparative Zoölogy, Harvard University, tells me these are generallyDasypus vellurosus. Colored plates of many of the interesting Aymará toys and textiles can be found in Stubel’sKultur und Industrie Süd Amerikanischer Völker.[3]In Paymaster Thompson’s report of his visit to Easter Island, he gives drawings and photographs of walls that bear a striking resemblance to Sacsahuaman. There is the same peculiar close fitting of one stone to another, the same striking size of the stones and lack of cement in the joints. See also Cook’sVoyage Around the World in 1772-1775, London, 1777.[4]E. G. Squier,Peru, p. 503.[5]Perou et Bolivie, pp. 293-5.[6]Raimondi,Peru, vol. ii, p. 161.[7]“On some Land Shells Collected by Dr. Hiram Bingham, in Peru”; Proceedings of the U. S. Nat. Mus., xxxviii. 177-182. The shells “comprised various species and varieties of Bulimulus and a single species of Clausilia.” The latter was described by Dr. H. A. Pilsbry.

FOOTNOTES:

[1]His sudden death in August, 1910, is a very great loss to Chile.

[1]His sudden death in August, 1910, is a very great loss to Chile.

[2]Mr. Thomas Barbour, of the Museum of Comparative Zoölogy, Harvard University, tells me these are generallyDasypus vellurosus. Colored plates of many of the interesting Aymará toys and textiles can be found in Stubel’sKultur und Industrie Süd Amerikanischer Völker.

[2]Mr. Thomas Barbour, of the Museum of Comparative Zoölogy, Harvard University, tells me these are generallyDasypus vellurosus. Colored plates of many of the interesting Aymará toys and textiles can be found in Stubel’sKultur und Industrie Süd Amerikanischer Völker.

[3]In Paymaster Thompson’s report of his visit to Easter Island, he gives drawings and photographs of walls that bear a striking resemblance to Sacsahuaman. There is the same peculiar close fitting of one stone to another, the same striking size of the stones and lack of cement in the joints. See also Cook’sVoyage Around the World in 1772-1775, London, 1777.

[3]In Paymaster Thompson’s report of his visit to Easter Island, he gives drawings and photographs of walls that bear a striking resemblance to Sacsahuaman. There is the same peculiar close fitting of one stone to another, the same striking size of the stones and lack of cement in the joints. See also Cook’sVoyage Around the World in 1772-1775, London, 1777.

[4]E. G. Squier,Peru, p. 503.

[4]E. G. Squier,Peru, p. 503.

[5]Perou et Bolivie, pp. 293-5.

[5]Perou et Bolivie, pp. 293-5.

[6]Raimondi,Peru, vol. ii, p. 161.

[6]Raimondi,Peru, vol. ii, p. 161.

[7]“On some Land Shells Collected by Dr. Hiram Bingham, in Peru”; Proceedings of the U. S. Nat. Mus., xxxviii. 177-182. The shells “comprised various species and varieties of Bulimulus and a single species of Clausilia.” The latter was described by Dr. H. A. Pilsbry.

[7]“On some Land Shells Collected by Dr. Hiram Bingham, in Peru”; Proceedings of the U. S. Nat. Mus., xxxviii. 177-182. The shells “comprised various species and varieties of Bulimulus and a single species of Clausilia.” The latter was described by Dr. H. A. Pilsbry.


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