KIDDER-GUERNSEY] ARCHEOLOGICAL EXPLORATIONS IN ARIZONA 143 
the lip, or just below it, to the upper side of the body. These handles 
are sometimes plain (pl. 58, e), but are more often composed of two 
(pls. 57, g; 58), three (pl. 57, c), or four (pl. 57, e) rolls of clay. 
pressed together. , Figure 61 shows an elaborate braid-like arrange- 
ment. 
UNCLASSIFIED POTTERY OBJECTS 
DISHES WITH PERFORATED EDGE: From Sunflower House were taken 
fragments of a very shallow dishlike pottery tray originally about 
13 inches in diameter (pl. 59,,6). All 
about its margin are small holes set close 
together and punched through the rim 
from the inside before the piece was fired. 
In some of these perforations are the re- 
mains of yucca strips that had been woven 
back and forth through them, apparently 
about the entire periphery. Fragments 
of similar dishes were found on the sur- 
face in Marsh Pass; Dr. Fewkes figures 
others from the same general vicinity.1 F!6- 61—Handle of corrugated 
The type is evidently a rather restricted ie 
one, but as to its use we are unable to offer a suggestion. 
Small vessels with raised wavy ridges are illustrated by Fewkes ? 
from Peach Spring; fragments of ‘almost identical specimens were 
recovered by us in Marsh Pass (A-2541). The paste is plain gray 
and the form is like that of a small, round seed jar; the ridges were 
evidently pinched with the fingers while the clay was soft. 
Erricies: From the surface at Ruin A were collected the two little 
clay effigies shown in natural size in figure 62. The faces are flat, 
Fic. 62.—Clay effigies. 
with the noses in relief; the eyes and mouth of the larger were pro- 
duced by punching with some small hollow implement; those of the 
other were made with a sharp-end tool and further emphasized by 
11911, -pl. 15, 0. a absplals yall alr cer 
