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The Jumano Indians

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About This Book

A scholarly investigation reconstructs the history, culture, and disappearance of a Southwestern indigenous people known from early Spanish accounts. Drawing on explorers' reports and missionary records, the study describes their river-valley villages, agriculture and buffalo hunting, distinctive house forms and body markings, food preparation using heated stones, and patterns of hospitality. It evaluates population estimates, encounters with Europeans, and the puzzling decline that cannot be fully attributed to warfare or epidemic. The work synthesizes ethnographic, linguistic, and historical evidence to propose hypotheses about identity, distribution, and the transformations wrought by contact with colonial society.

About the Author

Hodge, Frederick Webb portrait

Frederick Webb Hodge

Frederick Webb Hodge was an American anthropologist and ethnologist known for his contributions to the study of Native American cultures. He is particularly recognized for his work on the Jumano Indians, a group that inhabited parts of Texas and New Mexico. In his notable book, "The Jumano Indians," Hodge explores the history, culture, and social structures of this indigenous group, providing valuable insights into their way of life. His research has contributed to a greater understanding of Native American history and has been influential in the field of anthropology.

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