. Annual report of the Bureau of American Ethnology to the Secretary of the Smithsonian Institution . Cnp from Kintiel (num-ber 17G811i. \NEOtTS OBJECTS FROM THE RUIN. The stone objects from Kintiel are in no respect peculiar, and con-sist of mauls, hammers, axes, spearheads, and arrow jjoints. A small slab of stone had threecavities, arranged in a triangularform, in one siirface. There wereseveral clay disks, some with a cen-tral hole, others imperforate. Rect-angular gorgets of red stone werejjerforated at one side as if for sus-pension. There is a tubularpipe of red stone in


. Annual report of the Bureau of American Ethnology to the Secretary of the Smithsonian Institution . Cnp from Kintiel (num-ber 17G811i. \NEOtTS OBJECTS FROM THE RUIN. The stone objects from Kintiel are in no respect peculiar, and con-sist of mauls, hammers, axes, spearheads, and arrow jjoints. A small slab of stone had threecavities, arranged in a triangularform, in one siirface. There wereseveral clay disks, some with a cen-tral hole, others imperforate. Rect-angular gorgets of red stone werejjerforated at one side as if for sus-pension. There is a tubularpipe of red stone in the spherical stone balls, ranging in size from a marble to abaseball, were picked up on the surface. No prayer sticks were found in the graves, but in one of the foodbasins there was a collection of several hundred short sections of woodabout the size of a small lead pencil, and beveled at both ends. Thesewere about an inch long, reminding one of sticks called the frogspawn, wooden symbolic objects made in the Walpi Flute and Snakeceremonials. Fig. 84. Dipper from Kiutiel. 134 TWd summers WORK IN PUEBLO RUINS Bone objects—awls, nee


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Keywords: ., bookcentury1800, bookdecade1890, booksubjectindians, bookyear1895