First, before assigning homework, you'll need to provide a link that is a complete listing of ALL Native American tribes and their associated legends. After a brief review, your link does not do so.
You provided a link to a few antique references but it would be kinda important to include every tribe in such a work, would it not? Omitting books on entire tribes is a kinda crooked way to do a valid investigation wouldn't you say? Unless you had a preconceived outcome for your investigation.
Chris B.
Sorry if I didn't provide every tribe...let me give a list of what I did provide:
TALES OF THE NORTH AMERICAN INDIANS
by Stith Thompson [1929]
THE CLASSIC CROSS-CULTURAL NATIVE AMERICAN FOLKLORE STUDY.
THE PATH ON THE RAINBOW
by George W. Cronyn [1918]
A GROUND-BREAKING COLLECTION OF NATIVE AMERICAN ORAL LITERATURE: POETRY, CHANTS AND RITUALS.
THE SOUL OF THE INDIAN
by Charles Eastman [1911]
100,801 bytes
INDIAN WHY STORIES
by Frank Linderman [1915]
163,221 bytes
OLD INDIAN LEGENDS
by Zitkala-Sa [1901]
105,552 bytes
AMERICAN INDIAN FAIRY TALES
by Margaret Compton [1907]
AUTHENTIC NATIVE AMERICAN LORE RETOLD FOR CHILDREN OVER A CENTURY AGO.
General
RELIGION OF THE INDIANS OF CALIFORNIA
by A. L. Kroeber. UCPAAE VOL. 4, NO. 6, PP. 319-356. [1907]
KROEBER, WHO TAUGHT AT THE UNIVERSITY OF CALIFORNIA AT BERKELEY, IS BEST KNOWN FOR HIS STUDY OF ISHI, described as 'the last wild Indian' (see Yana Texts). He was also the father of the science fiction writer Ursula LeGuin.
A MISSION RECORD OF THE CALIFORNIA INDIANS
by A. L. Kroeber; UCPAAE 8, NO. 1, PP. 1-27 [1908]
ONE OF THE FEW MISSION-ERA ACCOUNTS OF THE NATIVE CALIFORNIANS.
MYTHS AND LEGENDS OF CALIFORNIA AND THE OLD SOUTHWEST
Compiled and edited by Katherine Berry Judson. [1912]
NATIVE AMERICAN LORE FROM THE WEST.
Northern California
INDIAN MYTHS OF SOUTH CENTRAL CALIFORNIA.
By A. L. Kroeber UCPAAE VOL. 4 NO. 4, PP. 167-250. [1907].
THIS COVERS THE MYTHOLOGY OF THE COSTANOANS, TODAY KNOWN AS THE OHLONE, WHO LIVED IN THE SAN FRANCISCO AND MONTEREY BAY AREA; AND THE YOKUTS, WHO LIVED IN THE SAN JOAQUIN VALLEY.
MIWOK MYTHS
By Edward Winslow Gifford. UCPAAE VOL. 12, NO. 8, PP. 283-338. [1917]
THE MIWOK LIVED IN THE AREA WHICH IS TODAY YOSEMITE NATIONAL PARK.
THE DAWN OF THE WORLD
MYTHS AND WEIRD TALES TOLD BY THE MEWAN [MIWOK] INDIANS OF CALIFORNIA, by C. Hart Merriam [1910]
INDIANS OF THE YOSEMITE VALLEY AND VICINITY
by Galen Clark [1904].
A BOOK BY ONE OF THE PIONEERS OF YOSEMITE VALLEY ABOUT THE NATIVE RESIDENTS, WITH MUCH INFORMATION OF HISTORICAL INTEREST.
THE LORE AND THE LURE OF THE YOSEMITE
by Herbert Earl Wilson [1922].
SOME OF THE KNOWN LEGENDS AND ETHNOGRAPHIC INFORMATION ABOUT THE NATIVE AMERICANS OF THE YOSEMITE VALLEY.
CREATION MYTHS OF PRIMITIVE AMERICA
by Jeremiah Curtin [1898]
AN EXCELLENT SET OF WINTU AND YANA ANIMAL TALES.
MAIDU TEXTS
by Roland B. Dixon, PUBLICATIONS OF THE AMERICAN ETHNOLOGICAL SOCIETY, VOL. IV [1912]
THE MAIDU INHABITED THE CENTRAL SIERRA NEVADA.
HUPA TEXTS
by Pliny Earle Goddard. UCPAAE VOL. 1 NO. 2 [1904]
THE HUPA LIVED IN NORTHWESTERN CALIFORNIA, HUMBOLDT COUNTY, ON THE TRINITY RIVER.
YANA TEXTS
by Edward Sapir. UCPAAE VOL. 9 NO. 1, PP. 1-235. [1910]
THE YANA LIVED IN THE NORTH-EAST SACRAMENTO VALLEY. The most famous Yana was Ishi, 'the last wild Indian'. He is the subject of an excellent book by Theodora Kroeber, wife of Alfred Krober, Ishi in Two Worlds.
ACHOMAWI AND ATSUGEWI TALES AND ACHOMAWI MYTHS
by Roland B. Dixon. JAFL VOL. 22, NO. 81, PP. 159-77 [1908] and JAFL VOL. 23, NO. 85, PP. 283-7 [1909].
THE ACHOMAWI AND ATSUGEWI LIVED IN NORTH-EASTERN CALIFORNIA.
POMO BEAR DOCTORS
by S. B. Barrett. UCPAAE 12:11, PP. 443-465. [1917]
POMO BEAR IMPERSONATOR BERSERKER SHAMANS.
Southern California
CHINIGCHINICH
by Friar Geronimo Boscana; tr. by Alfred Robinson; [1846]
THIS IS ONE OF THE FEW ETHOGRAPHIC ACCOUNTS OF NATIVE CALIFORNIAN RELIGION FROM THE MISSION ERA. This describes the Juaneños of Mission San Juan Capistrano.
THE MYTHOLOGY OF THE DIEGUEÑOS
by Constance Goddard Du Bois, JAFL VOL. XIV, NO. 54, PP. 181-5 [1901]
A SABOBA ORIGIN-MYTH
by George Wharton James; JAFL VOL. XV, NO. 61, PP. 36-9 [1902]
THE LEGEND OF TAUQUITCH AND ALGOOT
by George Wharton James; JAFL VOL. XVI, NO. 62, PP. 153-9 [1903]
THE STORY OF THE CHAUP; A MYTH OF THE DIEGUEÑOS
by Constance Goddard Du Bois; JAFL VOL. XVII, NO. 67 PP. 217-42 [1904]
THIS IS AN ARTICLE ABOUT THE MYTHOLOGY OF THE DIEGUEÑO PEOPLE, WHO LIVED IN THE VICINITY OF SAN DIEGO.
MYTHOLOGY OF THE MISSION INDIANS
by Constance Goddard Du Bois; JAFL VOL. XVII, NO. 66. PP. 185-8 [1904]; VOL. XIX. NO. 72 PP. 52-60 AND 73. PP. 145-64. [1906].
THIS IS AN ARTICLE ABOUT THE MYTHOLOGY OF THE LUISEÑO PEOPLE, WHO LIVED TO THE NORTH OF SAN DIEGO.
TWO MYTHS OF THE MISSION INDIANS
by A. L. Kroeber; JAFL VOL. XIX, NO. 75 PP. 309-21 [1906]
CEREMONIES AND TRADITIONS OF THE DIEGUEÑO INDIANS
by Constance Goddard Du Bois; JAFL XXI, NO. 82 PP. 228-36 [1908].
THE RELIGION OF THE LUISEÑO INDIANS OF SOUTHERN CALIFORNIA
by Constance Goddard Du Bois UCPAAE VOL. 8, NO. 3, PP. 69-186 [1908]
A PRIMARY SOURCE ON THE RELIGION OF THE ORIGINAL RESIDENTS OF ORANGE COUNTY, CA.
THE CULTURE OF THE LUISEÑO INDIANS
by Philip Stedman Sparkman UCPAAE VOL. 8, NO. 4, PP. 187-234. [1908]
LUISEÑO MATERIAL CULTURE, ETHNOBOTANY AND CEREMONIES.
ETHNOGRAPHY OF THE CAHUILLA INDIANS
by A. L. Kroeber; UCPAAE 8, NO. 2, PP. 29-68. [1908]
A SHORT ETHNOGRAPHY OF THE ORIGINAL DWELLERS IN THE SOUTHERN CALIFORNIAN DESERT
NOTES ON THE SHOSHONEAN DIALECTS OF SOUTHERN CALIFORNIA
by A. L. Kroeber; UCPAAE 8, NO. 5, PP. 235-269 [1909]
SALVAGE LINGUISTICS FOR THE LAST BITS OF THE SOUTHERN CALIFORNIAN LANGUAGES.
RELIGIOUS PRACTICES OF THE DIEGUEÑO INDIANS
by T. T. Waterman; UCPAAE 8, NO. 6, PP. 271-358 [1910]
THE CEREMONIES, SONGS, AND RITUALS OF THE ORIGINAL RESIDENTS OF SAN DIEGO.
Missions
MISSION MEMORIES
by John Steven McGroarty, illustrated by Frederick V. Carpenter [1929].
A GUIDE TO CALIFORNIA'S MISSIONS.
Nevada
SOME WESTERN SHOSHONI MYTHS
by Julian H. Steward; BAEB 136; PP. 249-299 [1943].
THE OLD NORTH TRAIL
by Walter McClintock [1910]
THE BLACKFEET TRIBE SHARE THEIR MYTHOLOGY, RELIGION, CEREMONIES AND SONGS WITH A KEEN OBSERVER.
BLACKFOOT LODGE TALES
by George Bird Grinnell [1892]
FOLKLORE, RELIGION AND CULTURE OF A KEY PLAINS NATIVE AMERICAN GROUP.
THE PUNISHMENT OF THE STINGY AND OTHER INDIAN STORIES
by George Bird Grinnell [1901]
RETELLINGS OF NATIVE AMERICAN LORE ABOUT GENEROSITY AND STINGINESS, from the Plains, Plateau and Northwest culture areas.
JICARILLA APACHE TEXTS
by Pliny Earle Goddard. [1911]
(ANTHROPOLOGICAL PAPERS OF THE AMERICAN MUSEUM OF NATURAL HISTORY, VOL. VIII.)
THE SUN DANCE AND OTHER CEREMONIES OF THE OGLALA DIVISION OF THE TETON DAKOTA.
by J. R. Walker. [1917]
(ANTHROPOLOGICAL PAPERS OF THE AMERICAN MUSEUM OF NATURAL HISTORY VOL. XVI, PART II)
DEATH AND FUNERAL CUSTOMS AMONG THE OMAHAS
by Francis La Flesche [1889]
JOURNAL OF AMERICAN FOLKLORE 2:4 PP. 3-11
THE PEYOTE CULT
by Paul Radin [1925]
from The Winnebago Tribe ch. xvi, pp. 340-78 (ARBAE 37)
THE FIRST ETHNOGRAPHIC ACCOUNT OF THE PEYOTE CEREMONY, THE ROOTS OF THE MODERN NATIVE AMERICAN CHURCH.
OLD INDIAN LEGENDS
by Zitkala-Sa [1901]
MYTHS AND LEGENDS OF THE SIOUX
BY MARIE L. MCLAUGHLIN [1916]
WALAM OLUM
EXCERPT FROM THE LENÂPÉ AND THEIR LEGENDS, by Daniel G. Brinton. BRINTON'S LIBRARY OF ABORIGINAL LITERATURE NUMBER V. Phildelphia [1885].
ONE OF THE ONLY INDIGENOUS PRE-CONTACT WRITTEN TEXTS AVAILABLE FROM NORTH AMERICA.
THE ALGONQUIN LEGENDS OF NEW ENGLAND
by Charles G. Leland [1898]
and Southern Alaska.
COOS TEXTS
by Leo Frachtenberg. [1913]
(COLUMBIA UNIVERSITY CONTRIBUTIONS TO ANTHROPOLOGY, VOL. I.)
CHINOOK TEXTS
by Franz Boas. [1894]
(U.S. BUREAU OF AMERICAN ETHNOLOGY BULLETIN, NO 20.)
KWAKIUTL TALES
by Franz Boas. [1910]
(COLUMBIA UNIVERSITY CONTRIBUTIONS TO ANTHROPOLOGY, VOL. II.)
HAIDA SONGS
by John R. Swanton. [1912]
(PUBLICATIONS OF THE AMERICAN ETHNOLOGICAL SOCIETY VOLUME III, PART 1.)
TSIMSHIAN TEXTS (NASS RIVER DIALECT)
by Franz Boas. [1902]
(U.S. BUREAU OF AMERICAN ETHNOLOGY BULLETIN NO. 27.)
TSIMSHIAN TEXTS (NEW SERIES)
by Franz Boas. [1912]
(PUBLICATIONS OF THE AMERICAN ETHNOLOGICAL SOCIETY VOLUME III, PART 2.)
TLINGIT MYTHS AND TEXTS
by John R. Swanton. [1909]
(U.S. BUREAU OF AMERICAN ETHNOLOGY BULLETIN NO. 39.)
THE THUNDER BIRD TOOTOOCH LEGENDS
by W. L. Weber. [1936]
THE SYMBOLS OF THE TOTEM POLE INTERPRETED.
MANY SWANS: SUN MYTH OF THE NORTH AMERICAN INDIANS
by Amy Lowell [1920]
have their own index.
MYTHS AND TALES OF THE SOUTHEASTERN INDIANS
by John R. Swanton. [1929]
(BUREAU OF AMERICAN ETHNOLOGY BULLETIN, NO. 88.)
A SCHOLARLY COLLECTION OF SOUTHEASTERN FOLKLORE.
WHEN THE STORM GOD RIDES: TEJAS AND OTHER INDIAN LEGENDS
by Florence Stratton, collected by Bessie M. Reid, Illustrations by Berniece Burrough. [1936]
TALES OF THE TEXAN NATIVE AMERICANS.
SACRED FORMULAS OF THE CHEROKEE by James Mooney [1891]
MYTHS OF THE CHEROKEE by James Mooney [1900]
THE DEFINITIVE STUDY OF CHEROKEE MYTHOLOGY
THE CHEROKEE BALL PLAY by James Mooney [1890]
THE DELIGHT MAKERS
by Adolf F. Bandelier [1890]
AN ETHNOGRAPHIC NOVEL OF PRE-COLUMBIAN PUEBLO LIFE.
PUEBLO INDIAN FOLK-STORIES
by Charles F. Lummis [1910]
A CLASSIC RETELLING OF PUEBLO MYTHOLOGY BY A PIONEERING SCHOLAR OF THE SOUTHWEST REGION.
TALES OF THE COCHITI INDIANS
by Ruth Benedict [1931]
BUREAU OF AMERICAN ETHNOLOGY BULLETIN 98.
A ETHNOGRAPHIC COLLECTION OF FOLKLORE FROM ONE OF THE NEW MEXICO PUEBLO GROUPS, THE COCHITI, BY ONE OF THE GREATEST 20TH CENTURY ANTHROPOLOGISTS.
DANCING GODS
by Erna Fergusson [1931]
THIS CLASSIC DESCRIPTION OF SOUTHWESTERN CEREMONIALISM IS ALSO A GREAT READ.
SONGS OF THE TEWA
tr. by Herbert Joseph Spinden [1931]
AN EVOCATIVE COLLECTION OF POETRY FROM THE TEWA PUEBLO PEOPLE, PLUS AN EXTENDED ESSAY ON NATIVE AMERICAN POETRY.
ORIGIN MYTH OF ACOMA
by Matthew W. Stirling [1942]
(BUREAU OF AMERICAN ETHNOLOGY BULLETIN 135)
A FASCINATING ACADEMIC STUDY OF THE ACOMA PUEBLO MYTH CYCLE.
THE TRIBES OF THE THIRTY-FIFTH PARALLEL
HARPER'S NEW MONTHLY MAGAZINE, VOL. XVII.--NO. 100, SEPTEMBER. [1858]
AW-AW-TAM INDIAN NIGHTS (MYTHS AND LEGENDS OF THE PIMA)
by J. William Lloyd [1911]
FOLKLORE OF THE PIMA, RESIDENTS OF THE DESERTS OF SOUTHERN ARIZONA.
YAQUI MYTHS AND LEGENDS
by Ruth Warner Giddings [1959]
NATIVE AMERICAN FOLKLORE FROM THE COAST OF THE SONORA DESERT OF MEXICO.
ORIGIN MYTHS OF THE NAVAHO INDIANS
by Aileen O'Bryan; BAEB 163 [1956]
THE MOUNTAIN CHANT, A NAVAJO CEREMONY
by Washington Matthews; ARBAEB 5 [1887]
NAVAHO MYTHS, PRAYERS, AND SONGS
by Washington Matthews; UCPAAE 5:2 [1906]
A COLLECTION OF NAVAJO SACRED TEXTS IN THE ORIGINAL AND ENGLISH TRANSLATION.
NOQOÌLPI, THE GAMBLER: A NAVAJO MYTH
by Washington Matthews; JAFL 2:5 [1889]
THE NAVAJO INDIANS
by William M. Edwardy; HARPER'S WEEKLY 34, JULY 5TH, [1890].
NAVAHO TEXTS
by Pliny Earle Goddard [1933]. (ANTHROPOLOGICAL PAPERS OF THE AMERICAN MUSEUM OF NATURAL HISTORY VOL. XXIV PT. I)
NAVAHO ORIGIN LEGEND
by A. M. Stephen, JAFL 43:88-104 [1930].
SPIDER WOMAN, A STORY OF NAVAJO WEAVERS AND CHANTERS
by Gladys Reichard [1934]
THE INTERSECTION OF MYTHOLOGY AND MATERIAL CULTURE AMONG NAVAJO WEAVER WOMEN.
NAVAJO CREATION MYTH
By Hasteen Klah, Recorded by Mary C. Wheelwright [1942].
IN THE BEGINNING: A NAVAHO CREATION MYTH
told by Frank Goldtooth, recorded by Stanley A. Fishler [1953]
TABLE OF ZUÑI SOUNDS
INTRODUCTION TO ZUÑI CEREMONIALISM 215,769 bytes
ZUÑI ORIGIN MYTHS 66,114 bytes
Zuñi Ritual Poetry
CUSHING: ZUÑI FOLK TALES [1901]
OUTLINE OF ZUÑI MYTHO-SOCIOLOGIC ORGANIZATION
THIRTEENTH ANNUAL REPORT OF THE BUREAU OF AMERICAN ETHNOLOGY, PP. 367-73, [1891-1892]
ZUÑI FETICHES
SECOND ANNUAL REPORT OF THE BUREAU OF AMERICAN ETHNOLOGY, 1880-1881, PP. 9-15, 30-31 [1883]
REMARKS ON SHAMANISM
PROCEEDINGS OF THE AMERICAN PHILOSOPHICAL SOCIETY 36:184-92. [1897]
FORM AND FORM AND THE DANCE DRAMA
THIRTEENTH ANNUAL REPORT OF THE BUREAU OF AMERICAN ETHNOLOGY, 1891-1892, P. 362 AND 374-77. [1896]
CORN RAISING: THE DECAY OF THE SEED
MILLSTONE 9, NO. 5, PP. 75-78. [1884]
CORN RAISING: THE REGENERATION OF THE SEED
MILLSTONE 9, NO. 6, PP. 93-95. [1884]
CLOWNS, PRIESTS, AND FESTIVALS OF THE KÂ'-KÂ
MILLSTONE 10, NO. 8, PP. 141-44. [1885]
CREATION AND THE ORIGIN OF CORN
MILLSTONE 9, NO. 1, PP. 1-3. [1884]
TRADITIONS OF THE HOPI
by H.R. Voth, FIELD COLUMBIAN MUSEUM ANTHROPOGICAL PUBLICATION VOL. VIII. [1905].
A TREASURE TROVE OF HOPI MYTH AND LEGEND.
TRUTH OF A HOPI
by Edmund Nequatewa, [1936]
HOPI MYTH, LEGEND, AND HISTORY, WRITTEN BY A HOPI, FROM A HOPI VIEWPOINT.
I think many of the tribes that are covered in this list are ones people now claim to have bigfoot references. One study specifically lists multiple tribes along the Klaamath river and Humboldt county - "Bigfoot Central" as I recall. Do the legends of the Cherokee count? Did you even look at the link?