KIDDER-GUERNSEY] ARCHEOLOGICAL EXPLORATIONS IN ARIZONA 93 
is well concealed and can be seen only from a few points on the 
rocks that would scarcely be reached by an ordinary visitor to the 
country. 
The approach from Laguna Creek is through a narrow ravine 
which connects the valley with one of the huge basins that lie back 
of the comb. From the bottom of the ravine the cave is approached 
by climbing up a rather steep ledge strewn with débris from the 
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Tic. 34.—Plan of Sunflower Cave. 
cliff above. The entrance is a ragged break in the rock, back of 
which opens a space 30 feet wide and 40 feet deep, with perhaps 
18 feet between the floor and the highest point in the dome-shaped 
roof. The opening faces the south and is flanked on one side by an 
overhanging cliff, beneath which are the much fallen walls of several 
cliff-house rooms (fig. 84). Within the cave, at the right of the 
entrance, the foundation walls of a room 10 feet long and 7 feet wide 
