mwKEs] KATCIIfAS APPEARING IN PALrLrKUNTI I'l 



his brother, two vertical marks on each chc(>k, which, however, are 

 bhick instead of white, and the warrior featlier on his head. H(> 

 carries a whizzer in the right hand and a bow and arrows in his 

 left, and wears a bandoleer across his left shoulder. His body and 

 extremities are painted Vjrowu and black. 



TCUKUBOT 



(Plate XXX) 



This is one of the numerous horned katcinas, distinguished by a 

 black helmet, white goggle eyes, and two bands across the face. They 

 roam about through the pueblos in certain great festivals. 



TCANAL- 



(Plate XXX) 



Tcanaii is an instructive personage. The pictitre represents him 

 as he appears in the Ankwaiiti. 



The mask is flat and has eagle feathers and two sticks similar to 

 those of the Wupamau mask radiating from the margin. The brown 

 bodies between these radiating eagle feathers are also feathers, a 

 bunch of which covers the back of the helmet." 



The face is destitute of symbolic markings, but a stufled image of 

 a snake hangs from the mouth. 



Tcanaii carries a slat of wood and a meal bag resembling that of 

 the Snake priests in his left hand, and in his right a crooked stick. 

 Four of these beings appeared in the Aiikwailti, and the personation 

 is said to have been originally introduced into Tusayan by the Pakab 

 clan. 



WUPAMAU 

 (Plate XXXI) 



This picture* represents a being the mask of which has a symbolism 

 recalling that of the sun. The face is flat, and is divided into three 

 regions by a horizontal and a vertical line. One of the lateral regions; 

 is j'ellow, the other is green. The chin is black and there is a long- 

 snout slightly curved downward, with an appended piece of leather, 

 colored red, representing the tongue. 



Around the rim of this face, more especiallv the upper part, is a 

 plaited corn-husk border, in which are inserted at intervals three 

 prominent eagle feathers and numerous smaller feathers. The latter 

 are but poi'tions of a mass which cover the whole back of the helmet. 



When Wupamau appears in Powamu or Aiikwanti, he is accom- 



" T!ie musks seen in the .-Vfikwanti have carved wooden lizards attached to their foreheads. 

 >> For picture ol' the doll, see luteruationales .\rehiv tUr Ethnographic, tiand vii. pi. vi, hg. ti. 



