MINDELEFF. } SMALL RUIN NEAR JEDITOH VALLEY. al 
village. These trees indicate the proximity of water, and mark the 
probable site of the spring that furnished this village with at least part 
of its water supply. 
There are many fragments of pottery on this spot, but they are not 
so abundant as at Awatubi. 
Two partly excavated rooms were seen at this ruin, the work of some 
earlier visitors who hoped to discover ethnologic or other treasure. 
These afforded no special information, as the character of the masonry 
exposed differed in no respect from that seen at other of the Tusayan 
ruins. No traces of adobe construction or suggestions of foreign in- 
fluence were seen at this ruin. 
SMALL RUIN BETWEEN HORN HOUSE AND BAT HOUSE. 
On a prolongation of the mesa occupied by the Horn House, midway 
between it and another ruined pueblo known as the Bat House, occur 
the remains of a small and compact cluster of houses (Fig.3). It is sit- 
uated on the very mesa edge, here about 40 feet high, at the head of a 
small canyon which opens into the Jeditoh Valley, a quarter of a mile 
below. 
Scale 
so = 
Sano e sono SSsseseoeoms mer 
100 
Fic. 3. Ruin between Bat House and Horn House. 
The site affords an extended outlook to the south over a large part 
of Jeditoh Valley. The topography about this point, which receives 
the drainage of a considerable area of the mesa top, would fit it especi- 
ally for the establishment of a reservoir. This fact probably had much 
