. Bulletin. Ethnology. judd] ARCHEOLOGICAL OBSEEVATIONS 91 of operations, 15 caves were visited during the two weeks which fol- lowed. The relative positions of these, one to the other, is indicated by the rough field map. Figure 24. Cottonwood Canyon was intimately associated with the settle- ment of southwestern Utah. Through its winding course ox teams. Fig, 24.—Sketch map of Cottonwood Canyon, showing location of the caves visited hauled much of the lumber used in construction of the Mormon temple at St. George. Colonists passed through Cottonwood about 1870, bound from an old location on


. Bulletin. Ethnology. judd] ARCHEOLOGICAL OBSEEVATIONS 91 of operations, 15 caves were visited during the two weeks which fol- lowed. The relative positions of these, one to the other, is indicated by the rough field map. Figure 24. Cottonwood Canyon was intimately associated with the settle- ment of southwestern Utah. Through its winding course ox teams. Fig, 24.—Sketch map of Cottonwood Canyon, showing location of the caves visited hauled much of the lumber used in construction of the Mormon temple at St. George. Colonists passed through Cottonwood about 1870, bound from an old location on Muddy Creek, a western trib- utary of the Rio Virgin, to new homes in Long Valley. Traffic. 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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Keywords: ., bookcentury1900, bookdecade1900, booksubjectethnolo, bookyear1901