188 BUREAU OF AMERICAN ETHNOLOGY [BULL. 65 
(fig. 94, 6) and the one from Kinboko (fig. 94, ~@) are much alike in 
size, shape, and material. The bowls are made of fine-grained lime- 
stone, banded horizontally and darkened by long use. The outer sur- 
faces are polished, but not highly enough to obliterate entirely the 
marks of the pecking tool with which they were originally roughed 
out. The rims are thick, in one case flat, in the other rounded. The 
bowl of each is heavily encrusted with the carbonized remains of the 
smoking mixture. The relative size and shape of bowl and stem 
hole is best shown in the illustration. In the stem hole of the Kin- 
boko specimen may be seen remnants of the gum that once fastened 
the stem in place, and the same material was used to mend an incipi- 
ent crack in the bowl. The dimensions of this example are: Length, 
jz inches; greatest diameter, 14 inches; thickness of rim, three- 
sixteenths inch; diameter of stem hole, one-eighth inch 
% 
pe nied age 
4: 
Fic. 94.—Stone and clay pipes. 
Two pipes of clay may perhaps best be described here. They were 
the only pottery objects found by us that are surely identifiable as 
Basket Maker products. One (fig. 94, d, Cave I) is crudely modeled 
from a bit of dark-gray clay; the surface is lumpy and carelessly 
finished. The second (A-1967, Sayodneechee) is also very poorly 
made and the surface is irregular. While both these specimens are 
longer and slimmer than the stone pipes, they are, nevertheless, 
much squatter than the long, tubular cliff-dwelling type; they differ 
from it also in having a distinct bowl much larger than the orifice 
which receives the stem. Although we recovered no example with 
the mouthpiece preserved, its nature is illustrated by a pipe in the 
Deseret Museum, Salt Lake City, probably from Cottonwood Canyon, 
Utah, which has a short, straight stem made from a 2-inch section 
of hollow bird bone. The bow] is of horizontally banded limestone, 
heavy, squat, and flat-lipped; in every way similar to our specimens, 
A Basket Maker pipe with wooden stem is figured by Montgomery 
in Moorehead’s “ Stone Age in North America,” vol. m1, p. 38, fig. 486. 
