. Bulletin. Ethnology. 310 BUHEAU OF AMEHTGAN: ETHNOUOGY [Boll. 128 A number of sherds were ground to circles, some but not all being perforated in their centers with small holes. These are tabulated on page 309, the measurements being in inches. Subsistence Domesticated plants.—There is no evidence to prove that horticul- ture belonged to the earUest period as specimens of domesticated. Figure 47.—Chipped sandstone "; Numbers indicate sites in the Johnson Canyon-Paria River region. The largest is 12 inches long. plants came only from caves which had been disturbed by previous d


. Bulletin. Ethnology. 310 BUHEAU OF AMEHTGAN: ETHNOUOGY [Boll. 128 A number of sherds were ground to circles, some but not all being perforated in their centers with small holes. These are tabulated on page 309, the measurements being in inches. Subsistence Domesticated plants.—There is no evidence to prove that horticul- ture belonged to the earUest period as specimens of domesticated. Figure 47.—Chipped sandstone "; Numbers indicate sites in the Johnson Canyon-Paria River region. The largest is 12 inches long. plants came only from caves which had been disturbed by previous digging. Site 2 yielded 15 specimens of maize, complete ears ranging from 1% inches to 5% inches in length and having usually 6 but sometimes 4 or 5 double rows of kernels. Sites 18, 37, 98, 113, and 131 also had similar Please note that these images are extracted from scanned page images that may have been digitally enhanced for readability - coloration and appearance of these illustrations may not perfectly resemble the original Smithsonian Institution. Bureau of American Ethnology. Washington : G. P. O.


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