NO. 10 ARCHEOLOGICAL COLLECTION FEWKES 3 



jects are unique. The author regarded this addition as so important 

 that he has prepared the following account as a contribution to a 

 little-known subject. 



Only three collections from this region are known, one now said 

 to be in California (Southwest Museum), made by Mr. Benjamin 

 Doney^ before 1900, and another made by the author about the 

 same time, which is in the U. S. National Museum. Neither of these 

 collections has been published, although they contain highly instruc- 

 tive objects. There is a small unpubHshed collection at Flagstaff. 

 When Mr. Clarke submitted the present collection he sent the writer 

 a catalogue, which is here published with a few unimportant changes. 

 The general forms of the pottery are shown in the accompanying 

 plates (pis. I, 2, 3). 



CATALOGUE = OF THE OBJECTS FROM A MOUND AT YOUNG'S 

 CANYON, NEAR FLAGSTAFF, ARIZONA 



GRAVE NO. I 



1. Dark red ware food bowl. 



2. Dark red ware food bowl. 



3. Dark red ware food olla. 



4. Dark red ware pot, with flat bottom, cracked. 



5. Bottom of a corrugated vessel. 



6. Dark red ware ladle. 



GRAVE NO. 2 



No object was found in this grave, but there was evidence that a 

 badger had worked through it. 



GRAVE NO. 3 



7. Gray (white) ware food bowl, painted inside (broken and re- 



paired). 



8. Dark red ware bowl. 



9. Dark red ware bowl. 



10. Dark red ware olla. 



11. Dark red ware olla. There is a blister on one side of the bot- 



tom, probably formed in burning. 



^Mr. Benjamin Doney made extensive excavations in several of the ruins 

 near Flagstaff, and acquired a considerable collection which the author ex- 

 amined in 1900. This collection, according to the author's information, was 

 sold in California and has not been published. When the author examined it, 

 he was much interested in several valuable specimens. 



' Prepared by Mr. J. C. Clarke, of Flagstaff, Arizona. 



