128 BUREAU OF AMERICAN ETHNOLOGY [BULD. 65 
The specimens vary in length, stoutness, and in the sharpness of their 
points; none offer features of particular interest. Some are made 
from whole bones, the joints furnishing convenient butts; others 
are worked from splinters of 
long-bones. 
Scrapers.—F igure 51 shows 
the only two scrapers re- 
covered; neither of them is 
of especially good workman- 
ship. The fine scrapers made 
from the humeri of the deer 
and mountain sheep, so common on the north side of the San Juan, 
do not appear to have been made in this region. 
Fic. 50.—Stone pendants. 
Opsects or Horn 
That the mountain sheep played an important part in the lives of 
the Cliff-dwellers is evidenced by the abundance of its bones in the 
midden heaps of their ruins, and by the frequency with which it was 
Fig. 51.—Bone tools. Ag) 
depicted in their rock-cut drawings. Its hair and hide were much 
used, and its horn found employment for the making of several 
types of implements. 
Scrapers.—The only two specimens of scrapers found inthe 
region are shown in plate 46 A, c,d, One is fashioned from the thin 
