Smithsonian Report, 1919.—Cook. PLATE 9. 
1. Pottery bowl from a cave in the Senahu district of eastern Guatemala, relic of a previous occu- 
pation of a region now being reoccupied after a period of reforestation. The bowl measures 94 
inches broad and 4 inches high, is of very regular form, and had an orange-yellow glazed or 
polished lining, still partially in place. 
2. Indian cornfields in the table-lands of Guatemala, among the pyramids of ancient Quiché, 
originally faced with smooth stone blocks, which have been removed to build the modern city. 
The name Quiché means forest, though no forests are left in this region. ‘ 
