56 



INDEX 



Page 

 Uopi— Continued. 



name Moki applied to 2 



old houses 17 



pottery 31 , 37, 38 



stone objects 40 



See also Sikyatki, pottery from. 



Hopi ceramic area 35-36, 37 



Hough, Dr. Walter, on pit-houses 20 



HuNGO Pa VIE, estufa at 15 



Inhabitants (ancient) of Mesa Verde- 

 arts -12, 43 



coal not used by 16 



cookery 16 



early accounts of 2 



ethnic position 15,28 



general culture 31 , 53-54 



population of Spruce-tree House 7 



significance of kiva structure 20 



Jackson ruin, location of 2 



Jackson, W. H., explorations of 2 



Kidder, A. V., acknowledgment to 29 



Kivas— 



correlation with black-and-white ware.. . 31 



general description 9, 17-23 



location 7-8 



proportion of 14, 21 



subterranean character 11, 20 



walls 10, 52 



Language of ancient people of Mesa Verde. . 53-54 



Leather and skin objects, notes on 51 



Ledge-houses, description of 0-7, 24-25 



Little Colorado valley— 



a ceramic area 34, 35, 30-37 



pottery from 31 , 34, 38 



Maize, chief food of ancient inhabitants 50 



Mancos canton, ruins in 2 



Mason, Charley, discoveries of 3 



Metal, no traces of 51 



Metates, description of 41 



MiSHONGNO VI, pottery from 35 



Moki, meaning of term 2 



Montezuma valley ruins, pottery from 37 



Morley, S. G., survey by 7 



Mortuary custom 28 



Mortuary room, description of 24 



Navaiio, and early Spanish travelers 2 



NORDENSKIOLD, BaRON GUSTAV— 



objects figured by 41 , 42, 43 



on ancient painting 52 



on balconies and terraced rooms 15 



on discovery of ClifE Palace and Spruce- 

 tree House 2-3 



on Mesa Verde pottery 28, 29 



on "moccasin lasts" 41 



on number of rooms in Spruce-tree House. 7 



on objects from Spruce-tree House 20 



Spruce-tree House described by 3-7 



work of 3 



NussBAUM, J., acknowledgment to 1 



Obsidian objects absent from Spruce-tree 



House 27 



OwAKULTi, a Hopi basket dance 51 



Page 



Patki clan (Hopi), coming of 35 



Pestles. See Grinding stones. 



Pictographs, description of 51-53 



PiROS ceramics not classified 35 



Pit-houses, features of 20 



Plan of ruin 4,7-8,9 



Plazas and courts, description of 8-9 



Population, aboriginal 7 



Pottery— 



ceramic areas 34-38 



decoration 32-34 



forms 29-30 



general account of 6,28 



structure 30-32 



summary 53 



See aZsospecific names, as San Juan valley, 

 Sikyatki, Zuni. 



Pounding stones, description of 41 



PowamO festival, incident of 10 



Prudden, Dr. T. Mitchell, on ruins of San 



Juan valley 8 



Pueblo Chettro Kettle, balcony in 15 



Pueblos, ancient location of 20 



Refuse-heaps, description of 25,27 



Retzius, Prof. G., cited by Nordenskiold, on 

 skull from Spruce-tree House 24 



Rio Grande ruins— 



in San Juan ceramic area 36 



pottery from 33 



Roofs— 



general description 15,17 



of kivas 18, 19, 21-23 



Rooms— 



described by Nordenskiold 4-7 



statistics 7 



See also Kivas, Secular rooms. 



Salt River ruins, pottery from 38 



San Juan valley- 



a ceramic area 34, 35, 36, 37-38 



pottery from 34, 36 



type of ruins In 8 



Secular rooms, description of 10-15 



balconies 15 



decorations on walls 52 



doors and windows 16 



fireplaces 16 



floors and roofs 17 



Shell objects, rarity of 27, 28, 53 



Shumopavi, pottery from 35, 36 



Sikyatki, pottery from— 



decoration 33 



general character 53 



in Hopi ceramic area 35,36 



lips of food bowls 29 



SipapO, description of 14, 18 



Site of Spruce-tree House 1, 7 



Spanish travelers, in Mesa Verde region... 2 



Spruce-tree canyon, description of 1 



Stairways, description of 25 



Step House, pottery from 28 



Stone objects, description of 26, 27 



axes 38-40 



cylinder of hematite 41-42 



grinding stones 40-41 



pounding stones 41 



