XO. 10 ARCHEOLOGICAL COLLECTION FEWKES 



GRAVE NO. 15 



56. Dark ware bowl. 



57. Dark ware bowl (cracked). 



58. Dark ware ladle. 



59. Dark ware bowl. 



60. Dark ware bowl, chipped (broken and repaired). 



61. Dark ware bowl, chipped. 



GRAVE NO. 16 ' 



62. Reddish ware bowl, handle broken. 



63. Bowl of a dark ware ladle, handle gone. 



64. Gray ware bowl, painted inside (broken and repaired; 



65. Corrugated bowl (badly broken and repaired). 



66. Dark ware bowl, cracked. 



67. Dark ware bowl. 



68. Corrugated pot. 



GRAVE NO. 17 



69. Dark ware oUa. 



70. Dark ware oUa, chipped. 



71. Dark ware bowl. 

 ^2. Dark ware bowl. 



(Nos. 71 and 72 were nested.) 



73. Dark ware olla. 



74. Dark ware olla, chipped. 



(Nos. 73 and 74 were nested.) 



FROM SEPARATE LOCATION 



75. Small dark ware pot.'' 



* This grave contained the skeleton of a woman. The body had been buried 

 face down and on her back and shoulders was the badly decayed skeleton of a 

 child, indicating that mothers carried their small children on their backs as the 

 Hopi do today. There was a small corrugated pot (No. 68) between the knees, 

 and on the outside of the right leg was a " lignite button " measuring 2\ inches 

 in diameter. This button had two parallel grooves, leaving a ridge between the 

 grooves through which a small hole had been drilled from each side of the ridge 

 until the holes met, thus affording a chance to suspend it. 



"^ This small pot had been used as a burial urn, as it contains some of the 

 burned bones of a child ; a molar tooth and sections of the skull can be easily 

 recognized. 



Mr. Clarke adds the following notes : 



" The discovery of this pot was the main incentive that the work should be 

 watched, for I have in my possession two other pots that have been used for this 



