134 THE ARCHEOLOGICAL EXCAVATIONS IN ANAU. 
(A) Dishes open wide, without marginal profiling (fig. 114). 
(B) Cups with different, more or less indrawn, margins, an essential feature 
being the polishing of the whole interior. Cups are distinguished from 
each other according to their profiling: 
(1) With moderately indrawn lip (figs. 115 and 116). Here belongs 
the feeding-cup, height 6.5 cm., mentioned above (pl. 9, fig. 1). 
(2) With broken-curved and strongly indrawn margin (fig. 117). 
(3) With strongly indrawn lower part (figs. 118 and 119). 
(C) Forms of vessels, the marginal upper half of which formsa more or less 
flat cone making at its base a sharp angle with the belly of the vessel; 
and reducing the size of the opening at the top. It is characteristic of 
this form that in the interior only the lip is slip-covered and polished 
(figs. 120-122). 
(D) Bottoms and feet: The vessels mentioned under A to C show various 
kinds of bottom or foot-formation : 
(1) Flat and somewhat concaved bottoms. Since the inner surface 
is always wholly covered and polished, this form probably 
belongs to groups A and B (fig. 123). 
(2) High, conical, hollow feet, belonging to groups A, B, or C (fig. 124). 
(3) High, cylindrical feet, hollow, with wide projecting edges; belong- 
ing to A and B (fig. 125). 
(E) pers artaec vessels or kettles, with various kinds of lip form (figs. 126 
and 127). 
Gray monochrome.—The forms of 114 115 
the gray monochrome ware agree in 
almost all of these cases with those 
of the red. Thus we find in gray clay 
similar profiles to those shown in figs. 
II5, 116, 119, 122,and 125. The high N 
columnar feet, however, have occurred thus far only s 
in the gray clay, and the technical characteristics, as well as 
certain peculiarities of form found in this gray pottery, point to a more 
developed stage; as, for example, profiles of vessels in figs. 128 and 129, where fine 
horizontal ribs are combined with traces of wheel technique. It is possible, there- 
fore, that the gray pottery reached a higher development than the red and remained 
longer in use. But their similarity in form, as well as in the circumstances under 
which they are found, point to the long-continued coexistence of the two families. 

ORNAMENTATION, 
The greater part of the red and gray fragments are not ornamented. Only 
two pieces—lip-pieces of cups with similar profile, as fig. 115—prove the existence 
of a very simple incised ornamentation, a form of technique which is wholly wanting 
in the pottery of culture I (see plate 9, figs. 2 and 3). Besides the better and more 
artistically made monochrome pottery, there were found also the remains of a 
coarse service ware of gray or brown clay. The forms, probably large kettles, are 
shown in figs. 130 and 131. 
The bake-ovens and kettles found in terraces I and v are coarse examples 
of group a. It remains doubtful to which group the small vessel (height 5 cm.) 
