The Salish People: Volume IV. Charles Hill-Tout

The Salish People: Volume IV - Charles Hill-Tout


Скачать книгу
-Report (1898) p. 1016.

      18 Second Report of the Committee on an Ethnological Survey of Canada, Report of the British Association for the Advancement of Science 68th Meeting (1898) pp. 698–699.

      19 Report of the Ethnological Survey of Canada, Report of the British Association for the Advancement of Science 69th Meeting (1899) p. 498.

      20 Report of the Ethnological Survey of Canada, Report of the British Association for the Advancement of Science 70th Meeting (1900) p. 470.

      21 Report of the Ethnological Survey of Canada, Report of the British Association for the Advancement of Science 71st Meeting (1901) pp. 409–411.

      22 Report of the British Association for the Advancement of Science 72nd Meeting (1902) pp. 353–354. On B.C. government support, see correspondence with Charles F. Newcombe (4 March 1901) below.

      23 Vancouver Museum papers include a scroll from “the Vagabonds,” bidding him farewell as he leaves for the East to “serve under arms,” 27 September 1916. He was thus aged fiftv-eight at the time.

      24 This information comes from a note written by Lionel Haweis (see item No. 34) on the occasion of presenting Hill-Tout papers to the Special Collections Library of the University of British Columbia.

      25 The Vancouver Sun printed a news item in its edition of 7 March 1941 (p. 24) with the headline: “Romance That Began at Picnic in Park.”

      Buckland College

       Vancouver, B.C.

       Oct 3rd 1895

      Dear Sir,

      Some months ago I forwarded to Dr. G. M. Dawson of Ottawa an ancient and peculiar skull taken from one of the series of tumuli explored by myself at a place called Hatzic on the Fraser about 50 miles up from its mouth. He said he thought you might be at Ottawa during the summer and would perhaps be good enough to examine it for me that your notes might be appended to a paper he was good enough to read for me at the recent meeting of the Royal Society at Ottawa and which was thought of sufficient interest to anthropology to publish in the Society’s Proceedings.2 As I have not heard anything on the point from Dr. Dawson, may I venture to ask you if you have been to Ottawa since the meeting of the Royal Society in May or have seen or heard of this particular skull from anybody there? I think it will interest you if for no other reason than that it does not conform to the Cowitchin [Halkomelem] type, in whose area the mounds are situated, but rather, if to any of your characteristic types, to the Chinook of the Columbia.3 It is excessively contorted and flattened, so much so that Dr. Dawson suggests post-mortem modification, but I do not think that this is so myself. I feel sure Dr. Dawson would send it on to you if you have not seen it and if you cared to; and I may say that I should personally feel grateful to you for a few notes upon it to add to my paper with reference to it. I am sorry I cannot send you a copy of my paper yet. The matter of it, I think, would interest you. This skull is practically all the human remains we have recovered from this series of mounds. They are evidently of great age and singularly devoid of relics, a few copper things only having been recovered from them — not a single relic of stone of any kind. From another one a portion of the frontal bone of a second skull was taken, which had been curiously preserved by the verdigris from a copper ring buried with it, and this appears to me to indicate that the excessive flattening of the frontal bone which is seen in the more perfect skull was not peculiar to it but was probably common to the builders of these sepulchres.

      In the explorations carried on by myself and a few friends among the middens of the Lower Fraser district, among the relics of interest we have recovered several crania of a type markedly distinct from those of the Indians now inhabiting this region. This will be of interest to you on account of their marked dolichocephaly. But besides their low cephalic index, their other peculiar charactersitcs differentiate them very widely from any of the typical crania of this district, I am not sure that I ought not to say of British Columbia. In looking over your tables of the physical characteristics of the tribes of this region I can find no division in which to place them. They seem to form a type by themselves. The mean cephalic index of the Lower Fraser tribes is, I see, about 88.50, and your minimum index does not fall below 82.7 for these people, whereas the mean of these midden crania of which I am speaking is under 74, judging by those that have come under my observation, none of which show signs of post-mortem or other modification, if we except a slight flattening in the region of the lambda due to the cradle, and which, if it affected their cephalic index at all, would tend to raise rather than lower it. This index is lower than any you have given with the exception of one of the Lytton group, all which you state have suffered from post-mortem deformation. I am familiar with the Lytton type, but see nothing in common between them and the midden dolichocephali, which are undoubtedly true dolichocephali. Contrasted with the brachycephalic skulls, also found in these middens, but I think always in the superior layers, they present very striking differences, two of the most noticeable of which are the entire absence of the parietal bulge, and the lofty sweep of the coronal arc. Indeed I think they might fitly be described by the term acrocephalic.

      These middens from which they are recovered are very extensive, one in which I have chiefly worked covering an area of over 4% acres and having a maximum depth of over 15 feet. They are of some age too, having been abandoned for at least half a millenium. They were formed before the alluvial islands in the estuary came into existence and when the salt waters of the gulf extended up as far, at least, as Port Hammond, 25 miles from the present mouths of the river. In speaking of middens I may say that we possess a great number of prehistoric heaps of the kind in this district, all of which have evidently, like those of the Fraser, been abandoned for many centuries. The oldest and biggest stumps of our biggest trees are seen projecting from their masses everywhere along the inlets, and I have thought it possible that this wholesale abandonment of such evidently desirable camp sites, in whose vicinity shell and other fish abound and have abounded in great quantities from time immemorial, may be accounted for by that intrusion of the Salishan warriors, which your linguistic investigations seem to declare must have taken place here at some indeterminate period in the past. I have suggested this explanation in my paper in speaking of these old camping grounds. The undoubted age of the middens, their long abandonment, and these dolichocephalic crania taken from some of them form together at any rate an exceedingly interesting question to my mind. I hope to be able to get the American Bureau of Ethnology to help me in these investigations for the future. More extensive exploration than I have hitherto been able to afford to give them is required. I know of several series of tumuli in other quarters, which I should like to open.

      I owe you an apology for this lengthy letter. I would not have ventured to inflict it upon you but for your known interest in these questions and topics. I trust I may hear from you at your leisure. Through the kindness of Dr. G. M. Dawson I possess your 6th and 7th reports on the North-West Tribes of Canada. I should like a copy of your others very much if you have any you can spare, and shall be pleased to send you a copy of my paper when printed later in return. Is your report of the natives of this district issued yet? Dr. Dawson told me you had one coming out.

      I am very truly yours

       Chas. Hill-Tout

      To Dr. Boas.

       P.S. Do you mind saying whether you think it possible to effect a pemanent deformation of the bones of the skull by continued practice of cranial contortion through many generations? For example, might not the marked brachycephaly of the Harrison River Indians be accounted for if it could be proved that they were the descendents of the Hatzic mound-builders who flattened their heads excessively. It seems to me that some permanent contortion of the head might result from these causes. Is this possible? C. H-T.

      New York 127 East 58th St.

       Oct 25th 1895

      Prof. Chas. Hill-Tout

       Vancouver B.C.

       Dear Sir,

      I just received your interesting communication of Oct


Скачать книгу