HOLMES.] 



FORMS OF THE MEANDER. 



349 



The vessel illustrated in Fig. 340 belongs to the Keain collection. The 

 decoration is very simple and consists of a novel combination of run- 

 ning scrolls. The design is produced by filling in the space between 

 two separate chains of scrolls in black with fine oblique lines, Fig. 341. 



Fig. 342 —Handled cup: Province of Cibola.— J, 



Identical treatment of the meander is found upon a mug brought from 

 Zuni and illustrated by Mr. Stevenson in the Second Annual IJeport of 

 the Bureau of Ethnology. Fig. 342. This will be apparent when the 



Fig. 343.— Painted ornament. 



design, Fig. 343, is placed by the side of the preceding. The first is 

 drawn in curved black lines, the ground remaining white, the second 

 is in rectilinear white lines, the ground being black. 



Fig. 344.— Painted ornament. 



Two others of like character, one angular and the other curvilinear, 

 are found upon small red vessels from Tusayan, Figs. 344 and 345. Still 



