144 BUREAU OF AMERICAN ETHNOLOGY [BULL. 65 
touches of black paint. The larger head appears to have been origi- 
nally provided with a “neck” like that of the smaller. Nothing 
resembling these figures has ever been found, so far as we know, in 
the San Juan drainage, and nothing exactly like them anywhere in 
the Southwest. . 
Pree: In figure 63 (actual size) are given a drawing and section of 
a clay pipe found on the sur- 
face of a small ruin on the top 
of the mesa at the mouth of 
Sagi Canyon. The surface is 
rough, the color reddish-gray. 
VESSEL FROM SUNFLOWER 
Cave: The position in which 
this pot was discovered (see 
p. 95) renders it certain that 
it is of an earlier period than 
the main sunflower cliff-house. As Basket Maker remains were 
noted in the same cave, and as this: vessel is unlike any normal 
Cliff-house product with which we are familiar, it is possible that 
it may have belonged to that culture. No other pottery identifiable 
aS Basket Maker was, however, found either here, in Kinboko, or at 
Sayodneechee. The form is sufficiently illustrated by the photo- 
graph (pl. 59, a). The dimensions are: Height, 9% inches; greatest 
Fic. 68.—Clay pipe. 
Fic. 64.—Ceremonial object. 
diameter, 10 inches; orifice, 43 inches. The base clay is a very dark 
gray, the exterior black with soot. The surface is rough, but shows 
the marks of a finishing tool applied vertically with a scraping move- 
ment. 
CEREMONIAL OBJECTS 
oe OWLS 9 
From Ruin 7 came the two little specimens figured in figures 64 and 
65. The former is 84 inches long, the latter 3 inches across the 
points of the cross. Identical objects are illustrated in the Fran- 
