GUESDE COLLECTION OF ANTIQUITIES IN WEST INDIES. 813 



Fig. 168. A paint mortar, of brown color. It is provided with a han- 

 dle partly broken. It is not an unusual thing among modern Indians 

 to use paint mortars with handles. 



Width, 3^ inches. 





ri'-- 



iMS 



'/K-p' 



>-^ 



^ 



-^^*, 

 .-% 

 ^ 





'■^^r 

 .-^i 





¥ui. 16K. 



Fig. 169. A pretty dish of rich brown color. It is oval outline, and 

 perfectly polished inside and out. The two ends are not quite sym- 

 metrical. 



Diameter, 5^ inches. 



W^f: 





W 



. -y^ 



d^"^'' 



Fig. 169. 



Fig. 170. A double concave disk of dark brown color, very smooth 

 and beautifully rounded. Archaeologists sometimes call such beautiful 

 objects paint-mortars and sometimes chungke stones. The Navajos, 



