KIDDER-GUERNSEY] ARCHEOLOGICAL EXPLORATIONS IN ARIZONA Ly 
was stitched in drying.” This might perhaps be one-half of a 
bag such as the above. 
Paint container (pl. 77, ¢).—What seems 
to have been a “roll-up” to hold pigments 
was found in a basket in Cave II. It con- 
sists of two pieces of skin of deer or moun- 
tain sheep sewed together in an overcast 
siitch with yucca string. At either end of 
the seam there project little rolled tags of 
hide, one of which is tied with cord. The 
flesh side of the object is heavily coated 
with red paint and the skin under the hair 
on the other side shows traces of the same. 
FEATHERS 
Uses of feathers under other heads are: 
in feather string, pendants, and in atlatl 
dart feathering (p. 181). Loose feathers 7"! t Bie eanale sons 
and feathers tied in bundles are shown in | 
plate 81, af, and bird skins in plate 77. The specific identifications, 
kindly made for us by Mr. Outram Bangs, of the Museum. of 
Comparative Zoology, Harvard University, 
follow: 
Western red-tailed hawk (Buteo borealis 
4 
(Fe eit ea 
Boy % 
« Poe: A 
(es \ Ny 
a Bhd calurus), plate 81, a. 
\ Dss'§ Swainson’s hawk (Luteo swainsoni), plate 
mae | Oe | tes 
see Ny ) (t \4 Western great horned owl (Bubo virginianus 
Ms Ud “i \ (\ (tg pollescens), plate 81, e. 
Yh ¢ 4 Raven (Corvus corax sinuatus), plate 
; rit UG op Oy 7 . 
Hi Mi Wa Crow (Corvus brachyrhynchus hesperis or 
Mp He \ ti : C. CANO (A-219% ), not figured. 
i i “ A. s4 Hutchins’ (?) wild goose (Branta canadensis 
vo ‘hy ik \ hutchinsi), plate 81, b. 
ae it ll tn sek { Greater yellowlegs (7ringa melanoleuca), 
A aula bis 4 plate 81, d. 
SINEW 
OT 
Sinews were much used for seizings as in 
Fie. 86.—Double-head feathering‘atlat] darts and making brushes. In 
Bos these cases the material was split into thin, 
narrow, tape-like strips. As a substitute for string it served to tie 
up bunches of feathers, for. attaching pendants to neck cords, etc.; 
90521°—19—Bull 65——12 
