Yuma IndiansSee also what's at Wikipedia, your library, or elsewhere.
Broader terms:Narrower terms:Used for:- Cuchan Indians
- Cuichana Indians
- Cutgana Indians
- Kwichan Indians
- Quechan Indians
- Umea Indians
- Yutcana Indians
- Quechan
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Filed under: Yuma Indians -- Folklore
Filed under: Yuma Indians -- Fort Yuma Reservation (Ariz. and Calif.) -- FolkloreFiled under: Yuma Indians -- Government relationsFiled under: Yuma Indians -- HistoryFiled under: Yuma Indians -- Origin
Items below (if any) are from related and broader terms.
Filed under: Indians of North America -- Arizona- The Stratigraphy and Archaeology of Ventana Cave (second printing; Tucson: University of Arizona Press, 1975), by Emil W. Haury (PDF with commentay at Open Arizona)
- Prehistoric Culture Units and Their Relationships in Northern Arizona (Museum of Northern Arizona bulletin #17; Flagstaff: Northern Arizona Society of Science and Art, 1939), by Harold Sellers Colton (page images at HathiTrust)
- Culture of Sites Which Were Occupied Shortly Before the Eruption of Sunset Crater (Museum of Northern Arizona bulletin #9; Flagstaff: Northern Arizona Society of Science and Art, 1936), by John C. McGregor (page images at HathiTrust)
- Montezuma Castle National Monument, Arizona (1958), by Albert H. Schroeder and Homer F. Hastings (illustrated HTML at National Park Service)
- Two Archaeological Studies in Northern Arizona: The Pueblo Ecology Study, Hail and Farewell; and A Brief Survey Through the Grand Canyon of the Colorado River (Museum of Northern Arizona bulletin #30; Flagstaff: Northern Arizona Society of Science and Art, 1958), by Walter W. Taylor (page images at HathiTrust; US access only)
- The Winter Solstice Altars at Hano Pueblo (New York: G. P. Putnam's Sons, 1899), by Jesse Walter Fewkes (Gutenberg text and illustrated HTML)
Filed under: Indians of North America -- Arizona -- Antiquities
Filed under: Sinagua cultureFiled under: Tohono O'odham Indians -- AntiquitiesFiled under: Indians of North America -- Glen Canyon (Utah and Ariz.) -- AntiquitiesFiled under: Indians of North America -- Arizona -- San Francisco Peaks -- AntiquitiesFiled under: Indians of North America -- Arizona -- Santa Cruz County -- AntiquitiesFiled under: Indians of North America -- Arizona -- Tsegi Canyon -- AntiquitiesFiled under: Indians of North America -- Arizona -- Verde River Valley -- AntiquitiesFiled under: Indians of North America -- Arizona -- Walhalla Plateau -- AntiquitiesFiled under: Indians of North America -- Arizona -- Ethnobotany
Filed under: Hopi Indians -- EthnobotanyFiled under: Pima Indians -- EthnobotanyFiled under: Indians of North America -- Arizona -- Fiction- The Vanishing American (as originally published in the Ladies' Home Journal, 1922-1923), by Zane Grey, illust. by Pruett Carter and Frank Street
- The Vanishing American (New York and London: Harper and Bros., 1925), by Zane Grey
Filed under: Indians of North America -- Arizona -- Folklore
Filed under: Hopi Indians -- FolkloreFiled under: Pima Indians -- FolkloreFiled under: Yaqui Indians -- Folklore
Filed under: Keres language -- GrammarFiled under: Keres language -- VocabularyFiled under: Indians of North America -- Arizona -- Rites and ceremoniesFiled under: Indians of North America -- Arizona -- Social life and customsFiled under: Indians of North America -- Arizona -- WarsFiled under: Havasupai IndiansFiled under: Hopi IndiansFiled under: Mohave Indians- Life among the Indians: or, The Captivity of the Oatman Girls Among the Apache & Mohave Indians (San Francisco: Grabhorn Press, 1935), by R. B. Stratton, contrib. by Lindley Bynum, Lorenzo D. Oatman, and Olive Ann Oatman, illust. by Mallette Dean (page images at HathiTrust)
- Captivity of the Oatman Girls: Being an Interesting Narrative of Life Among the Apache and Mohave Indians (New York: Pub. for the author by Carlton and Porter, 1858), by R. B. Stratton, contrib. by Lorenzo D. Oatman and Olive Ann Oatman (page images and uncorrected OCR text at MOA)
Filed under: Pima IndiansFiled under: Western Apache IndiansFiled under: Yaqui IndiansFiled under: Indians of North America -- Material culture -- ArizonaFiled under: Indians of North America -- Warfare -- ArizonaMore items available under broader and related terms at left. |