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List of Illustrations
- Texas A&M University Press
- Chapter
- Additional Information
1.1 Location of Waconda Lake 6 2.1 Natural landscapes near Waconda Lake 9 2.2 Paleoindian points 14 2.3 Archaic points 17 2.4 Early Ceramic points 19 2.5 Middle Ceramic points 23 2.6 Late Ceramic points 27 3.1 “Old Buffalo Trail” on the Colfax and Mora map 41 3.2 The Pawnee Trail 44 3.3 Frémont map showing a “Pawnee Trail” 46 3.4 J. R. Mead’s sketch of the Pawnee Trail 49 4.1 Projected route of the Villasur expedition 52 4.2 Segesser painting of the Villasur massacre 53 4.3 Ocate micaceous rim at Glen Elder, Kansas 54 4.4 Landmarks on the route of the Mallet brothers, 1739 56 4.5 Relationship of Truteau’s cave to the Pawnee trail and villages 58 4.6 First portion of Pedro Vial’s route across Kansas 60 4.7 Relationship of Vial’s route to later trails 62 L I S T O F I L L U S T R A T I O N S x List of Illustrations 4.8 The Pike/Nau map showing the route of Facundo Melgares 67 4.9 An interpretation of the Cardinal map 68 4.10 Pike’s route across Kansas mapped by Antoine Nau 71 4.11 Pike’s route and the Pawnee Trail 73 5.1 Native American sacred sites on the Great Plains 92 5.2 Earth-lodge-shaped feature at Thermopolis 95 5.3 Aerial photo of Waconda Spring 100 5.4 Postcard image of Omaha Indians at Waconda Spring, 1878 102 5.5 Comparison of the intaglios at Waconda Lake and in Rice County 106 6.1 Kansas reservations in 1846 119 6.2 GLO maps of Townships 6–7S, Ranges 9–10W, 1866 138 6.3 1880 maps showing certain improvements 146 6.4 The cultural landscape in 1900 147 6.5 Stone fence posts near Waconda Lake 153 6.6 Glen Elder Dam 155 6.7 “World’s Largest Ball of Twine,” Cawker City, Kansas 156 7.1 Images of the Waconda Spring Spa 168 7.2 Envelope and letterheads from Waconda Springs 179 7.3 Changing Waconda Springs letterheads 180 7.4 Excerpts from a Waconda Springs advertisement 181 ...