332. Double rectangle; median triangle 721
333. Double triangle with crooks 722
334. W-shape figure; single line with feathers 722
335. Compound rectangles, triangles, and feathers 722
336. Double triangle 722
337. Double triangle and feathers 723
338. Twin triangles 723
339. Triangle with terraced appendages 723
340. Mosaic pattern 723
341. Rectangles, stars, crooks, and parallel lines 724
342. Continuous crooks 724
343. Rectangular terrace pattern 724
344. Terrace pattern with parallel lines 725
345. Terrace pattern 725
346. Triangular pattern with feathers 725
347. S-pattern 726
348. Triangular and terrace figures 726
349. Crook, terrace, and parallel lines 726
350. Triangles, squares, and terraces 726
351. Bifurcated rectangular design 727
352. Lines of life and triangles 727
353. Infolded triangles 727
354. Human hand 728
355. Animal paw, limb, and triangle 728
356. Kaolin disk 729
357. Mortuary prayer-stick 736
ARCHEOLOGICAL EXPEDITION TO ARIZONA IN 1895
By JESSE WALTER FEWKES
INTRODUCTORY NOTE
About the close of May, 1895, I was invited to make a collection of
objects for the National Museum, illustrating the archeology of the
Southwest, especially that phase of pueblo life pertaining to the
so-called cliff houses. I was specially urged to make as large a
collection as possible, and the choice of locality was generously left
to my discretion.
Leaving Washington on the 25th of May, I obtained a collection and
returned with it to that city on the 15th of September, having spent
three months in
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