Chapter 24

SSacred island of the Indians,70Saganaw Bay,54,310Saliferous red clay,389Sandstone in a vertical position,102Sandstone rock found in place on the east coast of Lake Huron,52Sandy Lake,327Sarracenia purpurea, or owl's moccasin,214Saurian,249Savanna of Gatchi Betobeeg,141Savanna summit,118Saw-mills in the Indian territory,555Scenery of Lake Superior,587Schoolcraft's examination of the Indian vowels,443Schoolcraft's geological report,304Schoolcraft's Island,243Schoolcraft's official report in 1831,540Septaria,203Serpentine rock,322Sexual nouns,479Sheboigan, its etymology,195Shingabawossin reopens negotiations,81Sienitic and hornblende rock,148Silicious minerals,345Silurian limestone,167Silver, a boulder specimen,532Silver medal presented,99Sioux masses of colored clays,155Site of a massacre in 1812,200Site of an ancient dune,308Skeleton paradigm of the Indian verb,507Sketch of Sandy Lake,116Sketch of the banks of the Mississippi from St. Anthony,137Sketch of the river at the Copper Rock,97Sketches addressed to Gen. George P. Morris,560Skull Cave, on the island of Mackinac,66,Alexander Henry's adventures in 1763,66.Smallpox appears among the Chippewas in 1750,578Society on the island;its peculiar phases,69Soil and climate of Minnesota,153Soldiers poor canoemen,269Source of Assowa River,240;portage over the height of land,240South coast line of Lake Superior,320Species of freshwater shells,181St. Anthony's Falls, its Indian name,151St. Mary's Canal,82St. Paul's, Minnesota,159State of geological knowledge in 1819,381Stationary distances on Lake Superior,92Statistics of maple sugar made by the Indians,71Statistics of the fur trade,68Staurotide; native silver,53Steamboat Walk-in-the-Water,43Straits of St. Mary,315Stratification,81Stratum of quartzite rock,141Sub-exploring party,94Sub-formative pronouns in the Algonquin language,509;relative pronouns,509;demonstrative pronouns,513Summit Lake,263Sun above the horizon at 12 P. M.,106Superstition of the Indians,571Synopsis of Appendix No. 1,277TTable of latitudes and longitudes in the Northwest,582Tabular view of minerals of the Northwest,338Temperature required by tropical plants,426Tenacity of life of the deer,235Tensal inflections in the Algonquin,478Testimonial to Capt. Douglass and Mr. Schoolcraft,287The glutton,141The Mississippi viewed in sections,137The trap-rock the true copper-bearing medium,530Thirteen-striped squirrel,156Time required in passing Lake Superior,107Topography and astronomy,288Tortoise,113Tortuous channel,129Totem,123Tour from Galena to Fort Winnebago,560Track of Indian migration,122Tramp through a swamp,112Treaty of June 16, 1820,81Trunk of a tree fossilized,396Turtle River,131UUltimate point reached by the first expedition,132Unio,167,517Unio food for the wild duck,234Unio Schoolcraftensis,181Upper Red Cedar Lake,130Uva ursi,88VVaccination of Indians,574Valley of Taquimenon,537Valley of the St. Croix,332Valley of the St. Louis,325Vast caldron in grauwackke,103Verbs in the Algonquin, how changed to substantives,482Vermilion canoe,254Vesicular crumbling limestone,60Vestiges of a wreck on Lake Michigan,202View of Lake Huron,51Views of skeptics on the Mosaical chronology,407Virginia Island,105Visit Niagara, its etymology,41,42Visit to Gen. Dodge at his residence,567Visit to the locality of the great mass of copper on Lake Superior,299Vitric boulders,324Volcanic upheavals,305Voyageurs hired not to drink spirits, and to keep the Sabbath,268WWar-party of Neenaba broken up,553Water-worn agates on the lacustrine summit,112Waughpekennota,193White crystalline sand rock,331White Rock,52White springs of Ontario,385Width of Sandy Lake River at its outlet,226Width of the Mississippi at the outlet of Cass Lake,227Winnebago idea of geology,185Winonao laita,164Wisconsin,183,333Wisconsin lead mines;aspect of the country,561Wolverine,141YYear 1820 opens with severe weather,40Yellow River war-party,549ZZeolite,87Zinc found in the Wisconsin mines,565Zoned agate,237Zoological objects inclosed in rock, or the solid parts of trees, &c.,392Zoology,408

SSacred island of the Indians,70Saganaw Bay,54,310Saliferous red clay,389Sandstone in a vertical position,102Sandstone rock found in place on the east coast of Lake Huron,52Sandy Lake,327Sarracenia purpurea, or owl's moccasin,214Saurian,249Savanna of Gatchi Betobeeg,141Savanna summit,118Saw-mills in the Indian territory,555Scenery of Lake Superior,587Schoolcraft's examination of the Indian vowels,443Schoolcraft's geological report,304Schoolcraft's Island,243Schoolcraft's official report in 1831,540Septaria,203Serpentine rock,322Sexual nouns,479Sheboigan, its etymology,195Shingabawossin reopens negotiations,81Sienitic and hornblende rock,148Silicious minerals,345Silurian limestone,167Silver, a boulder specimen,532Silver medal presented,99Sioux masses of colored clays,155Site of a massacre in 1812,200Site of an ancient dune,308Skeleton paradigm of the Indian verb,507Sketch of Sandy Lake,116Sketch of the banks of the Mississippi from St. Anthony,137Sketch of the river at the Copper Rock,97Sketches addressed to Gen. George P. Morris,560Skull Cave, on the island of Mackinac,66,Alexander Henry's adventures in 1763,66.Smallpox appears among the Chippewas in 1750,578Society on the island;its peculiar phases,69Soil and climate of Minnesota,153Soldiers poor canoemen,269Source of Assowa River,240;portage over the height of land,240South coast line of Lake Superior,320Species of freshwater shells,181St. Anthony's Falls, its Indian name,151St. Mary's Canal,82St. Paul's, Minnesota,159State of geological knowledge in 1819,381Stationary distances on Lake Superior,92Statistics of maple sugar made by the Indians,71Statistics of the fur trade,68Staurotide; native silver,53Steamboat Walk-in-the-Water,43Straits of St. Mary,315Stratification,81Stratum of quartzite rock,141Sub-exploring party,94Sub-formative pronouns in the Algonquin language,509;relative pronouns,509;demonstrative pronouns,513Summit Lake,263Sun above the horizon at 12 P. M.,106Superstition of the Indians,571Synopsis of Appendix No. 1,277TTable of latitudes and longitudes in the Northwest,582Tabular view of minerals of the Northwest,338Temperature required by tropical plants,426Tenacity of life of the deer,235Tensal inflections in the Algonquin,478Testimonial to Capt. Douglass and Mr. Schoolcraft,287The glutton,141The Mississippi viewed in sections,137The trap-rock the true copper-bearing medium,530Thirteen-striped squirrel,156Time required in passing Lake Superior,107Topography and astronomy,288Tortoise,113Tortuous channel,129Totem,123Tour from Galena to Fort Winnebago,560Track of Indian migration,122Tramp through a swamp,112Treaty of June 16, 1820,81Trunk of a tree fossilized,396Turtle River,131UUltimate point reached by the first expedition,132Unio,167,517Unio food for the wild duck,234Unio Schoolcraftensis,181Upper Red Cedar Lake,130Uva ursi,88VVaccination of Indians,574Valley of Taquimenon,537Valley of the St. Croix,332Valley of the St. Louis,325Vast caldron in grauwackke,103Verbs in the Algonquin, how changed to substantives,482Vermilion canoe,254Vesicular crumbling limestone,60Vestiges of a wreck on Lake Michigan,202View of Lake Huron,51Views of skeptics on the Mosaical chronology,407Virginia Island,105Visit Niagara, its etymology,41,42Visit to Gen. Dodge at his residence,567Visit to the locality of the great mass of copper on Lake Superior,299Vitric boulders,324Volcanic upheavals,305Voyageurs hired not to drink spirits, and to keep the Sabbath,268WWar-party of Neenaba broken up,553Water-worn agates on the lacustrine summit,112Waughpekennota,193White crystalline sand rock,331White Rock,52White springs of Ontario,385Width of Sandy Lake River at its outlet,226Width of the Mississippi at the outlet of Cass Lake,227Winnebago idea of geology,185Winonao laita,164Wisconsin,183,333Wisconsin lead mines;aspect of the country,561Wolverine,141YYear 1820 opens with severe weather,40Yellow River war-party,549ZZeolite,87Zinc found in the Wisconsin mines,565Zoned agate,237Zoological objects inclosed in rock, or the solid parts of trees, &c.,392Zoology,408

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