558 ETHNOGEOGEAPHY OF THE TEWA INDIANS [eth. ann. 29 



cuted geometric figures painted black, and, so far as I could detect, without 

 gloss. This pottery is decidedly superior in quality and in tinish to the glossy 

 kind. Along with it the corrugated and indented ware abounds'. 



The larger ruins in Central New Mexico, and especially those belonging to 

 historic times, are generally covered with a profusion of potsherds, ' coarsely 

 painted, the decorations being glossy; some of it is undecorated and plain black.' 

 [[Footnote:'] Bulletin, p. 29.] Southwestern pottery shows two kinds of gloss 

 or glaze; one is thin, and displays a fair polish; the other, the kind exclusively 

 applied on decorative lines or figures, looks like a coarse varnish laid on very 

 thick, so as frequently to overran the outlines. The latter is the variety that I 

 have always found wanting in the small house ruins, whereas at the Pu-y6 

 [14:46], in the Tanos [Tano] country, and in the Quere.'s [Keresan], Tigua 

 [Tiwa], and Piros [Piro] pueblos, it is abundant. . . . Corrugated and in- 

 dented ware is rarer among the large type pueblos south of Santa F6 [29:5] 

 than farther north and in the small houses; and while the small house pottery 

 also occurs among ruins of the communal type, it is not abundant there.' 



There was a pueblo of the detached house type or cluster village near Lamy 

 [29:38], the mounds of which may be seen.^ 



See Lamy [29:38]. 



Nameless pueblo ruin opposite Algodones [29:7S]. Bandelier, the 

 sole authorit_v, seems to mean that this ruin is on the west side of 

 the Eio Grande: "1 have lately been informed that there is a ruin 

 opposite Algodones [29:78], in which case the one [29:87] on the 

 Cangelon [29:87] must have been a Tigua [Tiwa] pueblo. Not 

 having investigated the locality myself, 1 withhold my opinion".^ 



Nameless pueblo ruins near Santa Fe [29:5]. "East and southeast of 

 Santa Fe there are three ruins (mounds)".- The distance is not 

 given. 



Nameless pueblo ruin 6 miles southwest of Santa Fe [29:.5]. "The 

 road to Pefia Blanca [28:92] intersects the foundations of a small 

 pueblo 6 miles southwest of the city of Santa Fe [29:5]'\- The 

 distance from vSanta Fe possibly precludes this being the ruin at 

 Agua Fria settlement [29:1-4], which is usually said to be situated 

 3 miles south of Santa Fe, but is perhaps farther. 



Unmapped Places 



Places are here presented the location of which is known, but which 

 are not within the area covered by maps 1-29. See map [30], the key 

 map. 



^Akqnfhe'im.po 'river or rivers of the great plain {Wkqnfhe'ijjf, see 

 immediately below; fo 'water' 'river'). 



This name is applied by the Tewa to the Mississippi, Missouri, 

 Arkansas, and other rivers of the great plains. 



1 Bandelier, Final Report, pt. II, pp. 97-99, 1892. 

 2T\vitcliell. in Santa Fe New Mexican, Sept. 22, 1910. 

 3 Bandelier, op. cit., p. 224, note. 



