Albert B. Reagan
#163,134
Most Influential Person Across History
Professor Brigham Young University, anthropologist, author
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Anthropology
Why Is Albert B. Reagan Influential?
(Suggest an Edit or Addition)According to Wikipedia, Professor Albert B. Reagan was an American author and historian of Native American history. He was professor of anthropology at Brigham Young University and documented Native American customs and folklore in New Mexico, Arizona, Minnesota, Colorado, Washington, and Utah, for tribes that include the Jemez people, Navajo people, Ojibwe people, Quileute people, and Ute people.
Albert B. Reagan's Published Works
Number of citations in a given year to any of this author's works
Total number of citations to an author for the works they published in a given year. This highlights publication of the most important work(s) by the author
Published Works
- Plants Used By The White Mountain Apache Indians Of Arizona (29)
- Plants Used by the Hoh and Quileute Indians (1934) (22)
- Notes on the Indians of the Fort Apache region. Anthropological papers of the AMNH ; v. 31, pt. 5 (16)
- Ojibwa Myths and Tales. The Manabozho Cycle (14)
- Some notes on the Olympic peninsula, Washington (8)
- SOME GAMES OF THE BOIS FORT OJIBWA2 (1919) (7)
- Tales from the Hoh and Quileute (1933) (7)
- RECENT CHANGES IN THE PLATEAU REGION. (1924) (6)
- SOME NOTES ON THE SNAKE PICTOGRAPHS OF NINE MILE CANYON, UTAH (1933) (5)
- Birds of the Olympic Peninsula, Washington (4)
- The Tertiary-Pleistocene of the Navajo Country in Arizona, with a Description of Some of Its Included Fossils (1932) (4)
- MEDICINE SONGS OF GEORGE FARMER1 (1922) (4)
- Animals, Reptiles and Amphibians of the Rose-Bud Indian Reservation, South Dakota (1907) (3)
- Anciently Inhabited Caves of the Vernal (Utah) District, with Some Additional Notes on Nine Mile Canyon, Northeast Utah (1933) (3)
- Archaeological Notes on Pine River Valley, Colorado, and the Kayenta-Tuba Region, Arizona (1919) (3)
- The "Flu" among the Navajos (1919) (3)
- Destruction of Young Water Birds by a Storm (3)
- The Marine Tertiary Stratigraphy of the North Pacific Coast of North America (1914) (2)
- Dances of the Jemez Pueblo Indians (1906) (2)
- Archeological Notes on the Fort Apache Region, Arizona (1930) (2)
- Who Made the Kayenta‐National Monument Ruins (1920) (2)
- The Influenza and the Navajo (2)
- Some Geological Notes of the Upper Cretaceous of Black Mesa, Arizona (1932) (2)
- The Pictographs of Ashley and Dry Fork Valleys in Northeastern Utah (1931) (2)
- The Cliff Dwellers of Arizona (1)
- The Shoshoni-Goship Indians (1916) (1)
- NORTHERN LIGHTS IN SUMMER. (1914) (1)
- SOME NOTES ON THE OLYMPIC PENINSULA, WASHINGTON. A REPLY TO CRITICISMS BY ARNOLD AND HANNIBAL. (1916) (1)
- Early House Builders of the Brush Creek Region in Northeastern Utah (1931) (1)
- Some Notes on the Lummi-Nooksack Indians, Washington (1919) (1)
- Sketches of Indian Life and Character (1907) (1)
- The Moccasin Game (1)
- COAL NEAR PINEDALE, NAVIJO COUNTY, ARIZ. (1911) (1)
- Wild or Indian Rice (1)
- The Lummi Indians (1)
- Additional Archaeological Notes on the Uintah Basin, in Northeastern Utah (1934) (1)
- CHIPETA, QUEEN OF THE UTES, AND HER EQUALLY ILLUSTRIOUS HUSBAND, NOTED CHIEF OURAY (1933) (1)
- PETROGLYPHS SHOW THAT THE ANCIENTS OF THE SOUTHWEST WORE MASKS (1935) (1)
- The Flora of the Olympic Peninsula, Washington (1)
- Some Paintings from one of the Estufas in the Indian Village of Jemez, New Mexico (1)
- Hunting and Fishing of Various Tribes of Indians (1919) (1)
- Some Sea Shells from La Push, Wash. (1907) (1)
- A NAVAHO FIRE DANCE (1934) (1)
- CONCERNING LEFT-HANDED ABORIGINES. (1907) (1)
- Some Geological Studies on Northwestern Washington and Adjacent British Territory (1906) (1)
- The Flood Myth of the Chippewas (1)
- Geology of the Deep Creek Reservation, Utah, and Its Environs (1929) (1)
- All Saints' Day at Jemez, New Mexico (1)
- THE BLOWING OF SOILS. (1908) (1)
- Some Chippewa Medicinal Receipts (1921) (1)
- THE ZIA MESA AND RUINS. (1909) (1)
- Chief Moses Day Daybway-Waindung (0)
- That Erroneous Hiawatha (0)
- Notes on the Shaker Church of the Indians (0)
- MYTH ABOUT THE MOON-MOTHER AND THE BEAR (1927) (0)
- Yaquis Fighting for Life (0)
- Authors Without Text (0)
- EVIDENCE OF MIGRATION IN ANCIENT PUEBLO TIMES (1933) (0)
- Animals of the Olympic Peninsula, Washington (0)
- A DAYLIGHT METEOR. (1928) (0)
- Continued Archaeological Studies in the Navajo Country, Arizona (1922) (0)
- Naezhosh, or the Apache Pole Game (0)
- What is the Age of the Aubrey Limestone of the Rocky Mountains (0)
- NORTH AMERICAN FISH-HOOKS. (1936) (0)
- SOME ADDITIONAL NOTES ON THE BLOWING OF SOILS. (1913) (0)
- Indians' Religious Tortures (1927) (0)
- Correlation of the Formations Described in the Fort Apache Region in Arizona with Similar Formations in Other Parts of the State (1918) (0)
- CORRELATION NOTES. (0)
- Probable Origin of the Depressions in the Mesa South of the Tijeras Canyon, New Mexico (0)
- Notes on the Flora of the Rosebud Indian Reservation, South Dakota (1905) (0)
- The Bois Fort Indian Reservation in Minnesota (0)
- The Southern Ute Indians of Pine River Valley, Colorado (0)
- Correlation Notes (1911) (0)
- Some Additional Notes on the Blowing of Soils (1913) (0)
- A Probable Origin of the Rings of Saturn (1914) (0)
- Evidence of a Possible Migration in the Very Dawning Period of Pueblo Culture (1934) (0)
- A Plague of Cholera Infantum at Nett Lake, Minnesota, in the Fall of 1913 (1918) (0)
- Indians Celebrate Solstice (1927) (0)
- SAND-STORM ELECTRICITY. (1930) (0)
- The Rosebud Indian Celebration (0)
- The Matachina Dance (0)
- Some Myths of the Hoh and Quillayute Indians (1935) (0)
- A Trip in the Little Fork, Nett River Country, Minnesota (0)
- Some Suggestions on Climate (1919) (0)
- The Polvadera meteorite (0)
- Archaeology of the Tuba-Kayenta Region (Continued) (1919) (0)
- Plague among Chickens in Central Iowa during the Summer of 1918 (1919) (0)
- The Apache Medicine Game (0)
- The Shake Dance of the Quilente Indians, with Drawing by an Indian Pupil in the Indian School (0)
- Northern Lights in Summer (1914) (0)
- The Apache Region, Arizona, and Its Indians (0)
- The Birds of the Rosebud Indian Reservation, South Dakota (1908) (0)
- Flood Myth of the Bois Fort Chippewas (1919) (0)
- Probable Eocene Glacial Deposits in the Fort Apache Region, Arizona (1919) (0)
- A Probable Origin of the Small Mounds of the Mississippi and Texas Regions (0)
- Identification of Two Fossil Leaves from Iowa, One from Arizona and a "Tree Trunk" from Kansas (0)
- Forts Robidoux and Kit Carson in Northeastern Utah (1935) (0)
- Geology of Monroe County, Indiana. North of the Latitude of Bloomington (0)
- Description of Some Fossil Plants from the Stanford Paleontological Collection (0)
- The Sun or Gunelpiya Medicine Disk (0)
- The Wreck of the "Suthern" (0)
- Summary of Glacial Literature Relating to Glacial Deposits (1907) (0)
- The Jemez Coal Fields (0)
- The Mine Centre Mining District, Ontario, and Adjacent Territory in the United States (1918) (0)
- Glacial Deposits in Pine River Valley, Colorado (1919) (0)
- Some Fossils from the Lower Aubrey and Upper Red Wall in the Vicinity of Fort Apache, Arizona (0)
- The Shi-Shi Gig (0)
- The Fossils of the Red Wall Compared with Those of the Kansas Coal Measures (0)
- CERTAIN “WRITINGS” OF NORTHWESTERN IKDIANS (1928) (0)
- Birds of the Bois Fort Indian Reservation and Adjacent Territory in Minnesota (1916) (0)
- The Apache Ceremonies Performed Over the Daughter of C 30 (0)
- Fossils from the Mancos-Dakota-Tununk Formation in the Vicinity of Steamboat, Arizona (0)
- A Trip Among the Rainy Lakes (0)
- Concerning Left-Handed Aborigines (1907) (0)
- The Olympic Forest and Its Potential Possibilities (0)
- The Glacial Epoch (1913) (0)
- The Effects of Ice in Lakes upon the Shore Lines of the Same (0)
- The Olympic Coal Fields of Washington (0)
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