NO. I ARCHITECTURE OF PUEBLO BONITO — JUDD 243 



TABLE OF ROOM DIMENSW^S— continued 



^A second story chamber over R. 97 (sec note 2). 



2* See note 11. 



^Unpublished Pepper negatives, Nos. 550 and 552, identify R. 117 as the triangular room 

 immediately north of that marked 117 on Hyde's groundplan. Rooms 118-129 likewise have 

 been identified through Pepper negatives and relocated on the NGS plan. 



* On Hyde's groundplan, R. 139 is represented north of 138, a site partially occupied by 

 Kiva 2-D. Unpublished Pepper negatives, Nos. 594, 595, and 655, identify the R. 138 of 

 Hyde's plan as 137; Rooms 138 and 139 as the spaces south and north, respectively, of the 

 single wall that bars the former passage between Rooms 137 and 140. North and south of 

 this wall are sub-court foundations as shown on figure 5. 



^ Room 142, not described by Pepper, should be divided by a 9" thick partition. 



** Room 227 B overlies 227 and 227-1, the latter being a first-story structure not anticipated 

 when the rooms were numbered prior to excavation. 



^ Rooms 247 and 252 were originally one room, later divided by the passageway, 250. 

 The second story of this long room was also partitioned, perhaps earlier, by a wall resting 

 upon a beam introduced at floor level, 17' from the north end of R. 252B. Further, the space 

 south of this partition was divided by a similar wall, supported by the southernmost ceiling 

 beam in R. 247; thus were formed the north and south chambers noted here as R. 247BN 

 and 247BS. Positions of the two divisions, which had collapsed with decay of their support- 

 ing timbers, were indicated during 1921 repairs. (See Note 10). 



*• By construction of a rough partition, a single chamber was divided into the rooms num- 

 bered 248 and 249. And the latter, at about the same time, was divided by an introduced 

 floor into what are here designated 249Ai and 249A2. In the lower of these two divisions 

 (249Ai) macaws were housed. Room 248 was rubbish filled. A beam at floor level supported 

 the wall between Rs. 248B and 249B. 



*i The wall separating Rs. 247B and 252B rested upon a log placed above the second story 

 floor offsets, 17' from the north end of the latter room; thus 247 is longer than its two second 

 story apartments and 252B covers 252, 250 (a passageway) and 17" of 247. 



'- Posts in the space numbered 286, at the southeast corner of the East Court, may have 

 supported a flat brush roof. Beneath the floor of this open living room were the partially 

 razed walls of a kiva which had been replaced by Kiva 2-E. 



ssThe first story of R. 299 was the Hyde Expedition's storeroom (Pepper, 1920, p. 27); 

 wires still hang from its ceiling. The adjoining room, 300, is heavily smoked; a recent stone 

 bench fills the east end. Room 146 served as kitchen pending completion of the 1897 

 Wetherill trading post against the outer north wall (ibid., p. 21, fig. 4). 



** Too small even for storage purposes, R. 305 had no doorway; it was filled with debris 

 of reconstruction and blown sand but was ceiled at the same level as 209. The upper stories 

 may have been utilized. 



35 Room 307B overlies 307 and 307-1. 



*• Like 286, the space numbered 310 was utilized as an open workroom. Nine metates, some 

 discarded and others positioned for use, were found on ten successive pavements. 



3' Another unenclosed work space, 313, was partially screened by an abandoned room whose 

 second-type masonry supports the fourth period stonework of 312. 



** As in the case of 249, R. 335 was divided into upper and lower chambers, here denoted 

 as 335Ai and 335A2. 



** Rooms 345 and 346 were either unfinished or almost wholly razed, more likely the 

 former. 



** Space 347 is the dooryard of R. 324. Rooms 348 and 349, originally a single, subcourt 

 room, were formed when a rough partition, faced on the north side only, closed off the south 

 half (349) and left the remainder for unknown purposes. A circular ventilator shaft con- 

 necting with 348 rose south of the dividing wall, buried in debris of reconstruction to the 

 court level. Later R. 348 became common dumping ground. 



