MALLERY.] HUMAN HEAD AND FACE. 707 
latter denote large coils of hair so arranged by tying. Their significance 
is that the wearer is an unmarried woman. The remaining designs 
also resemble types of human figures found upon Zuni and Pueblo 
pottery, being rather of a decorative character than having special 
significance. 
eS 
Wineneee 
Gionesa 
sud 
wan 
a et a 
pavorsaneuwwecieaeeers 
eee 
ceraca tenet 
TY) 
wae 
Fig. 1167.—Human form. Pern 
HUMAN HEAD AND FACE. 
A large number of human faces as drawn by members of different 
tribes and stocks of North American Indians appear in the present 
paper. Some of them are iconographic and others are highly conven- 
tionalized. Other examples from other regions of the world are also 
presented under various headings. 
In the present connection it may be useful to examine a series of 
drawings from the prehistoric pottery of Brazil in the National Museum 
