Summary of your 'study carrel' ============================== This is a summary of your Distant Reader 'study carrel'. The Distant Reader harvested & cached your content into a collection/corpus. It then applied sets of natural language processing and text mining against the collection. The results of this process was reduced to a database file -- a 'study carrel'. The study carrel can then be queried, thus bringing light specific characteristics for your collection. These characteristics can help you summarize the collection as well as enumerate things you might want to investigate more closely. This report is a terse narrative report, and when processing is complete you will be linked to a more complete narrative report. Eric Lease Morgan Number of items in the collection; 'How big is my corpus?' ---------------------------------------------------------- 8 Average length of all items measured in words; "More or less, how big is each item?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------ 15687 Average readability score of all items (0 = difficult; 100 = easy) ------------------------------------------------------------------ 78 Top 50 statistically significant keywords; "What is my collection about?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------- 6 Mexico 6 Indians 4 Yucatan 4 God 3 mexican 3 man 3 San 3 Maya 3 Lord 3 Guatemala 3 America 2 woman 2 spanish 2 sidenote 2 great 2 day 2 Voy 2 Valley 2 Tezcuco 2 Ternaux 2 Tehuantepec 2 Sun 2 Sierra 2 Santa 2 River 2 Rio 2 Nouvelles 2 Nicaragua 2 New 2 Nahua 2 Mérida 2 Idaho 2 Huitzilopochtli 2 Hist 2 Herrera 2 Don 2 Doc 2 Compans 2 California 2 Aztecs 2 Apaches 2 Annales 1 work 1 way 1 vol 1 town 1 tom 1 time 1 road 1 peruvian Top 50 lemmatized nouns; "What is discussed?" --------------------------------------------- 8667 p. 2884 man 1909 time 1678 day 1562 woman 1561 people 1291 house 1290 foot 1260 tribe 1241 place 1209 part 1085 stone 1079 water 1038 year 1019 head 985 name 899 hand 889 side 879 town 874 country 862 way 814 work 782 body 779 child 713 animal 686 priest 681 sidenote 681 river 659 end 650 nation 646 mountain 637 order 628 food 624 life 604 skin 586 death 585 number 581 king 564 city 560 tree 550 other 547 face 544 race 542 ground 540 god 540 cap 537 village 521 hair 511 night 504 wall Top 50 proper nouns; "What are the names of persons or places?" -------------------------------------------------------------- 54934 _ 6140 . 4255 de 3763 pp 3423 tom 2906 vol 2359 y 2305 Hist 2195 ii 2018 i. 1761 la 1464 que 1255 iii 1133 Voy 1092 los 1073 Mexico 1046 Mex 993 Indians 930 Ind. 880 del 838 Rept 817 | 778 el 747 San 721 iv 662 lib 661 las 620 River 613 Id. 601 Gen. 511 se 506 MS 486 Maya 463 New 450 god 447 Nat 447 Ex 439 Brasseur 434 dec 434 R. 418 le 417 Bourbourg 414 con 407 les 405 á 393 Torquemada 374 fol 368 Nahua 365 et 363 Ant Top 50 personal pronouns nouns; "To whom are things referred?" ------------------------------------------------------------- 7591 it 7338 they 5973 we 5546 he 4193 i 3243 them 2130 him 1890 us 1068 me 680 you 662 she 654 themselves 471 himself 324 her 191 itself 152 ourselves 134 myself 111 one 60 ''em 47 thee 41 herself 20 ours 18 theirs 14 yourself 12 thyself 10 mine 9 ''s 8 his 7 yours 5 th 5 pp 5 em 4 ye 4 ya 4 ce 4 ay 2 ó 1 á 1 y 1 whence 1 tzin 1 tz 1 tortillas 1 thy 1 ourself 1 oi 1 lived!--an 1 l''on 1 jus 1 io Top 50 lemmatized verbs; "What do things do?" --------------------------------------------- 42322 be 10242 have 3188 make 2201 do 1947 see 1713 take 1608 say 1598 find 1580 come 1495 give 1443 go 1307 call 993 use 941 know 809 leave 796 live 791 carry 728 place 709 hold 708 tell 705 seem 702 pass 699 follow 673 wear 672 bring 573 get 566 speak 562 die 560 become 559 eat 546 cover 539 keep 530 look 524 appear 508 show 500 stand 487 reach 480 form 457 fall 455 build 440 cut 438 accord 431 lie 422 remain 419 set 397 think 394 bear 393 put 387 occupy 386 begin Top 50 lemmatized adjectives and adverbs; "How are things described?" --------------------------------------------------------------------- 4286 not 2166 other 1951 so 1854 great 1770 more 1658 also 1578 very 1529 only 1391 little 1388 then 1356 most 1320 up 1318 well 1280 many 1254 long 1198 first 1172 out 1130 as 1063 large 1032 same 994 much 978 small 949 here 879 good 875 such 868 high 844 old 834 even 781 down 738 now 678 however 659 few 634 far 625 own 613 certain 585 there 583 still 573 several 564 thus 560 sometimes 543 again 542 together 537 almost 534 about 525 white 518 never 497 mexican 492 low 485 once 462 less Top 50 lemmatized superlative adjectives; "How are things described to the extreme?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------- 364 most 202 good 194 least 119 high 104 great 80 large 59 Most 51 near 40 eld 39 low 39 fine 30 slight 29 bad 26 strong 25 old 21 early 15 small 13 rich 13 manif 11 simple 11 grand 11 brave 10 c'' 8 wide 8 common 7 young 7 southernmost 7 long 7 hard 7 e 7 cold 6 wise 6 big 5 thick 5 tall 5 rude 5 pure 5 poor 5 noble 5 fat 5 farth 5 deep 4 short 4 hot 4 heavy 4 full 4 dark 4 choice 4 bold 4 able Top 50 lemmatized superlative adverbs; "How do things do to the extreme?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------ 992 most 40 well 31 least 2 soon 2 near 1 x 1 worst 1 oftenest 1 hard 1 finest Top 50 Internet domains; "What Webbed places are alluded to in this corpus?" ---------------------------------------------------------------------------- Top 50 URLs; "What is hyperlinked from this corpus?" ---------------------------------------------------- Top 50 email addresses; "Who are you gonna call?" ------------------------------------------------- Top 50 positive assertions; "What sentences are in the shape of noun-verb-noun?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------------- 10 _ is _ 9 women are not 7 people do not 6 women are more 5 men do not 4 _ got _ 4 people did not 4 women do not 4 women have not 3 _ is large 3 houses are well 3 men are more 3 men took part 3 people are very 3 time was precious 3 tribes speaking different 3 water was so 3 women are short 2 _ did not 2 _ does not 2 _ has _ 2 _ have _ 2 _ is often 2 _ live about 2 _ was not 2 _ were also 2 day was over 2 days were not 2 feet are small 2 feet were bare 2 house is full 2 houses are rectangular 2 houses were also 2 houses were only 2 man had not 2 man is drunk 2 man is never 2 man is only 2 men are almost 2 men are tall 2 mexico are so 2 people are generally 2 people are purely 2 people came together 2 people living south 2 people took part 2 people went home 2 people were not 2 people were very 2 place was as Top 50 negative assertions; "What sentences are in the shape of noun-verb-no|not-noun?" --------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- 1 _ does not necessarily 1 _ had no room 1 _ has no power 1 _ was not present 1 days were not good 1 man be not pleased 1 man is not wholly 1 man was not old 1 men are no longer 1 men are not specific 1 men had no desire 1 men have no shame 1 men made no pretense 1 men use no saddle 1 men were no longer 1 mexico had not yet 1 people had no canoes 1 people left no relics 1 people were not so 1 place is not suitable 1 place was no real 1 stone are not uncommon 1 stones had no doubt 1 stones was not accidental 1 tribe do not tattoo 1 tribes carried no weapons 1 tribes is not much 1 tribes were not so 1 woman got no ease 1 woman is not prolific 1 woman was not unattractive 1 women are no less 1 women are not at 1 women are not devoid 1 women are not immodest 1 women are not prolific 1 women do not usually 1 women have not only 1 women made no demur A rudimentary bibliography -------------------------- id = 41070 author = Bancroft, Hubert Howe title = The Native Races [of the Pacific states], Volume 1, Wild Tribes The Works of Hubert Howe Bancroft, Volume 1 date = keywords = Adven; Aff; Alaska; America; Annales; Apaches; Arch; Bay; Berra; Cal; California; Cape; Cent; Chinooks; Clarke; Coast; Colorado; Columbia; Compans; Cook; Cremony; Darien; Deserts; Doc; Domenech; Dunn; Emory; Eskimos; Ethnog; Explor; Farnham; Fort; Francisco; Geografía; Gibbs; Hale; Herrera; Hist; Idaho; Indians; Island; John; Jour; Juan; Kane; Klamath; Kotzebue; Lake; Lewis; Life; Lond; Lord; Ludewig; Mackenzie; Marcy; Mayne; Mexicana; Mexico; Mexique; Mofras; Monthly; Mountains; Möllhausen; Mühlenpfordt; Nar; Nat; Nevada; New; Nez; Nicaragua; Nootka; Norte; Noticias; Nouvelles; Ogn; Oregon; Orozco; Overland; Pac; Pacific; Palmer; Parker; Percés; Pers; Powers; Races; Reisen; Rept; Richardson; Rio; River; Rocky; Ross; San; Santa; Scenes; Schoolcraft; Seemann; Sierra; Simpson; Smet; Smithsonian; Soc; Sonora; Sound; Sproat; Stat; Stevens; Tehuantepec; Ternaux; Texas; Trav; Valley; Vancouver; Viage; Voy; Voyages; Walla; Wand; Whipple; Wilkes; York; sidenote; vol summary = interior people of the northern coast near the Mackenzie river, is not The Atnas are a small tribe inhabiting the Atna or Copper River. and the interior Indian tribes ''are generally formed by the summit of The _Horn Mountain Indians_ ''inhabit the country betwixt Great Bear Lake morse-skins, made in the form of a canoe.'' _Kotzebue''s Voy._, vol. tribes.[231] The great _Shoshone_ family, extending south-east from the especial chiefs with real power in time of war, so the fishing tribes, Tribes mentioned by Morse as living in the vicinity of Clarke River: to the tribe who live on the small river which falls into the Columbia [233] ''The Indian tribes of the North-western Coast may be divided into tribe of the celebrated chief Marin lived near the mission of San ''Indian tribes living near the Oregon and California coast frontiers.'' [Sidenote: RUSSIAN RIVER AND COAST TRIBES.] tribe of Indians we had before seen.'' _Vancouver''s Voy._, vol. id = 42808 author = Bancroft, Hubert Howe title = The Native Races [of the Pacific states], Volume 2, Civilized Nations The Works of Hubert Howe Bancroft, Volume 2 date = keywords = Acosta; Ahau; America; Annales; Ant; Anáhuac; Aztecs; Bernal; Boturini; Bourbourg; Brasseur; CHAPTER; Camargo; Carbajal; Cartas; Casas; Clavigero; Codex; Cogolludo; Col; Compans; Conq; Cortés; Cultur; Diaz; Doc; Duran; Espinosa; Fernando; Gama; Geschichte; God; Gomara; Guatemala; Herrera; Hist; Huitzilopochtli; Humboldt; Icazbalceta; Idaho; Ixtlilxochitl; Kingsborough; Klemm; Landa; Las; Lord; Martyr; Maya; Mendieta; Messico; Mex; Mexico; Michoacan; Monarq; Montezuma; Motolinia; Nahua; Navigationi; New; Nicaragua; Nouvelles; Oviedo; Peter; Pimentel; Prescott; Quiché; Ramusio; Rapport; Relacion; Relatione; Sahagun; Spaniards; Squier; Storia; Teatro; Ternaux; Tezcuco; Tezozomoc; Tlacopan; Tlascala; Toltec; Torquemada; Veytia; Voy; Ximenez; Ynd; Yucatan; day; dress; feast; iii; king; mexican; sidenote; spanish; tom summary = Mexican Cycle -The Civil Year -The Aztec Months -Names certain days in each year, which were generally celebrated with feasts Lord our God hath called him to rest with the dead kings, his great solace and joy; in thee hath the Lord God given us a sun-like After the king in rank, ''eran los quatro electores del Rey, que years to efface all vestiges of Aztec art and greatness than time and delante quitando las pajas del suelo por finas que fuesen.'' _Hist. common people, but likewise by the great nobles and the high-priest. in other parts of Mexico the priests and nobles passed several days in Every eight years a grand festival took place, called CYCLE--THE CIVIL YEAR--THE AZTEC MONTHS--NAMES OF THE DAYS equaling the number of days in the Mexican year.[804] The temple at which day some great event probably took place in their history. id = 39914 author = García Cubas, Antonio title = Reports on the Maya Indians of Yucatan date = keywords = Brinton; God; Holy; Indians; Maya; Mérida; Nahuan; Saint; Yucatan; note; woman summary = THE MAYA INDIANS OF YUCATAN IN 1861, by Santiago Mendez 143 Indians of Yucatan, and especially concerning their beliefs, which Indians of Yucatan contained in the work of Pedro Sanchez de Aguilar, THE MAYA INDIANS OF YUCATAN IN 1861 extensive lands, the wealthy Indians pay their day-laborers and necessaries of life an Indian family of Yucatan needs, and which to see a little Indian girl of three trot daily to the woods with her Between the ages of six and eleven years the little Indian maiden The Indians of Yucatan speak the Maya language, though somewhat Generally speaking, the Indians of Yucatan are of about the same NOTES ON THE SUPERSTITIONS OF THE INDIANS OF YUCATAN NOTES ON THE SUPERSTITIONS OF THE INDIANS OF YUCATAN The abuses and superstitions in which those Indians of Yucatan believe [1] For the meaning of this and of other Indian words, consult the id = 21618 author = Janvier, Thomas A. (Thomas Allibone) title = The Aztec Treasure-House date = keywords = Antonio; Captain; Chaltzantzin; Council; Dennis; Don; Fray; God; Indians; King; Mexico; Pablo; Priest; Professor; Rafael; Rayburn; Sabio; Tizoc; Tlahuicos; Young; christian; great; man; way summary = things which befell me--in company with Rayburn and Young and Fray mountains--in which time I got enough working knowledge of the Indian "In very ancient times, he said, his people came forth from seven Christian God. But in a moment a look of sadness and regret came into Fray Antonio''s to this duty; in His own good time and way I doubt not that He will work Antonio and I rode first; then came Rayburn and Young, followed by the very end of the cañon, and the dark wall of rock that barred our way came into Rayburn''s face, and he said: "I think that I understand what It was as this heavy work went slowly forward that Pablo said to me, Tizoc and Young and Rayburn had come through it all without as much as a with Pablo and with Fray Antonio, and so come to know through what id = 16426 author = Lumholtz, Carl title = Unknown Mexico, Volume 1 (of 2) A Record of Five Years'' Exploration Among the Tribes of the Western Sierra Madre; In the Tierra Caliente of Tepic and Jalisco; and Among the Tarascos of Michoacan date = keywords = American; Apaches; Barranca; Cave; Chihuahua; Coras; Coyote; Devil; Diego; Dios; Guachochic; Hikuli; Indians; Madre; Mexicans; Mexico; Mr.; Nacori; Pages; Rio; River; San; Sierra; States; Sun; Tarahumare; Tata; Tepehuanes; Valley; chapter; find; foot; man summary = Dancing Place--The Original Cross of America--Tarahumare Storehouses, old Apache camping place, called by the Mexicans "Rancheria de los The cave had evidently been occupied for a very long time, the houses reserved, and even more Indian-like than the Tarahumares I had seen The Houses of the Tarahumares--American Cave-dwellings of The Houses of the Tarahumares--American Cave-dwellings of or Dancing Place--The Original Cross of America--Tarahumare The Tarahumare never lives all his life in one house or cave; richest man in the Tarahumare country, now dead, had five caves, an old man brought together all the people at the place where the that their faces, like those of Mexican Indians in general, have more And on the following morning a man came and asked the Indian general dancing-place, in front of the Tarahumare dwelling, but on a and therefore the Tarahumares place their houses some little distance id = 30385 author = Massey, William C. title = A Burial Cave in Baja California The Palmer Collection, 1887 date = keywords = Angeles; Bahía; Baja; California; Los; Massey summary = Angeles in Baja California was deposited in the United States National A BURIAL CAVE IN BAJA CALIFORNIA Bahía de Los Angeles on the peninsula of Baja California. from the little-known area of Baja California, the Palmer Collection has archaeological collection from Bahía de Los Angeles does indicate The small cave at Bahía de Los Angeles contained at least seven burials: of which several specimens have been found in Baja California, at Bahía Both human-hair cord and palm-fiber cordage, common to cave collections Los Angeles are most like historic-period materials from central Baja Four specimens of sticks wrapped with cord were recovered. cord, S-twist, medium, which is wrapped three times around the bone and natives of Baja California, archaeological specimens of both the sewed Harrington''s plate, are very similar to the Baja California specimens in Indians of central Baja California (see "Carrying Nets"). its artifacts with cultural materials from central Baja California to id = 53080 author = Spence, Lewis title = The Myths of Mexico & Peru date = keywords = America; Apu; Aztecs; Ccapac; Central; Chichen; Cuzco; God; Guatemala; House; Huitzilopochtli; Hun; Inca; Indians; Kiche; Lord; Maya; Mexico; Nahua; Peru; Popol; Quetzalcoatl; Sun; Tezcatlipoca; Tezcuco; Titicaca; Tlaloc; Tollan; Toltecs; Vuh; Vukub; Yucatan; mexican; peruvian; spanish summary = canoe from an early period, and that the Mexican god Quetzalcoatl, not temples or covered-in buildings, but "high places," great pyramids is of course to the gods of the invading Nahua tribes, the deities head of the wind-god stands for the second of the twenty day signs, Mexican god, or at least was not of Nahua origin, as he is mentioned Man of the Sun, but the original wind-god of the country. the Mexican rain-god Tlaloc, for many of the American races believed various Maya tribes worshipped similar gods under different names. great deity in Maya religion, and the myths which tell of the origin that four days'' journey from that place a great Indian city was to be Mexican name of the sun-god, 97 of the Maya, god of the sun, the wind, and thunder, common to Mexican probably a god of pre-Nahua people, 78; Maya deity; God E probably id = 16183 author = Starr, Frederick title = In Indian Mexico (1908) date = keywords = Don; Ernst; Guatemala; Gutierrez; Indians; Louis; Manuel; Maria; Mexico; Mérida; Oaxaca; San; Santa; Señor; Tehuantepec; Tuxtla; Yucatan; Zapotec; day; great; house; illustration; leave; little; man; mexican; road; time; town; woman; work summary = ourselves in the great indian town of San Gabriel de Chila. terrace, we came abruptly on the little town of San Lorenzo with San Bartolome is an almost purely indian town, where for the first time house a store, but on the highway between towns, we passed many places interesting, great indian town, when the afternoon was nearly spent. little time "for preparing the soil;" that all his people were indians, town-house, which is a portion of the old church building; mass was in little better than animals; in my town there is great enthusiasm over Leaving at noon, we took the long road past Jacona, a little Tangancicuaro, a large town with a _plaza_ full of fine, great trees, a slope at the bottom of which was a little indian town, Tanaco. town-house, we presented our documents to the _presidente_, and ordered mean little town, with houses much like those of Tilantongo, but of a