. Bulletin. Ethnology. Anthrop. Pap. NO. 18] UTAH ARCHEOLOGY—^STEWARD 305 Interiors are smoothed, lacking horizontal striations of corrugated ware and rarely showing more than fine scratches. Temper roughens both surfaces. Forms: OUas, including wide and small-mouth (fig. 43), the latter being characteristic. There is considerable variation in these neck shapes (fig. 44), some approximating the Paria gray flaring-mouth olla forms. Some bear small vertical handles, which are either per- forated lugs or a short strip with one end fixed, the other bent down (fig. 43). This belongs to the latest,


. Bulletin. Ethnology. Anthrop. Pap. NO. 18] UTAH ARCHEOLOGY—^STEWARD 305 Interiors are smoothed, lacking horizontal striations of corrugated ware and rarely showing more than fine scratches. Temper roughens both surfaces. Forms: OUas, including wide and small-mouth (fig. 43), the latter being characteristic. There is considerable variation in these neck shapes (fig. 44), some approximating the Paria gray flaring-mouth olla forms. Some bear small vertical handles, which are either per- forated lugs or a short strip with one end fixed, the other bent down (fig. 43). This belongs to the latest, masonry-house period. Johnson corrugated.—Paste gray or brownish gray to tan. Temper: Large amount of quartz sand; occasional trace of sherds. Interior: Smoothed and striated. Exterior: Variable; plain coils; coUs pinched and tooled, i. e., stick punched; alternating bands of pinched and plain; or partially obhterated. Occurs with Tusayan (Virgin) black-on- A. A ^ ^ Figure 44.—Variations in rims of plain ollas. white at late masonry pueblo sites. Corrugated ware from Zion National Park region associated with similar black-on-white ware and masonry houses is identical with this. Forms: Wide-mouth oUas, with rims slightly curved over to outside; some have short handle attached vertically under rim and turned down (fig. 46); or made of three interwoven strips of clay, site 65. A specimen in the Judd collection at Kanab measured: Height, 12)^ inches; greatest diameter, 12)^ inches; greatest circumference, 3 feet 9% inches; outside diameter of orifice, 5K inches; inside diameter of orifice, 4% inches. A few smaU pitchers. This belongs to the latest, masonry house period. Red-on-tan.—One sherd only (11907)* of this novel ware, site 142. Paste: Coarse, tan. Temper: Quartz. Incised ware.—Mr. Neaf Hamblin of Kanab has 3 similar pots foimd by him in a grave a few miles southeast of Johnson Canyon. One of these, 11904, loaned the University of Utah, is totally unhke the other wa


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Keywords: ., bookcentury1900, bookdecade1900, booksubjectethnolo, bookyear1901