IV TABLE OF CONTENTS 



Material culture of the Indians of Samand — Continued. Page 



Pottery 73 



Pottery from the caves 73 



San Juan pottery types 76 



Pottery stamps and miscellaneous objects 78 



Crosshatching and stone collar designs 79 



Rattles 80 



Water bottles 81 



Archaic clay figurine heads 83 



Pottery pestle lens 85 



Rims and lugs 85 



Petroglyphs and pictographs 87 



LIST OF PLATES 



Frontispiece. Map of Santo Domingo. 

 Plate 1. Hammerstones. 



2. Hammerstones and net weights. 



3. Perforators and knives of flaked stone. 



4. Grooved .stone implements and notched net vpeights. 



5. Stone celts and pestles. 



6. Pictographs and petroglyphs. 



7. Shell dishes and bowls. 



8. Gouges of worked shell. 



9. Miscellaneous arts in shell. 



10. Beads of shell, bone, and stone. 



11. Wood and bone zemis. 



12. Bone picks of worked manatee ribs. 



13. Pictographs and petroglyphs. 



14. Earthenware vessels. 



15. Decorated water bottles. 



16. Unusual types of effigy figurine heads. 



17. Discoidal pottery " stamps " and spindle whorl. 



18. Punctate and Crosshatch decorative embellishments. 



19. Stone collar designs ; anthropomorphic and zoomorphic figurines. 



20. Conventionalized life forms on pottery vessels. 



21. Circle and dot ; curvilinear, and terminal punctate designs. 



22. Red ware zoomorphic figurine heads. 



23. Conventionalized handles and lugs on shallow bowls. 



24. Types of inward gazing figurine heads on shallow bowls. 



25. Types of incorporated figurines on red ware. 



26. Decorative handles and lugs on pottery vessels. 



27. Anthropomorphic and zoomorphic clay figurine heads. 



