. Bulletin. Ethnology. MOUND VASES; HUMAN FORMS, ft, Arkansas; Height ef in. '*) Missouri; Height 9+ in. B. A. E., 1883, (2) in 3d Rep. B. A. E., 1884; M. C. Stevenson in 11th Rep. B. A. E., 1894; Stites, Economics of the Iro- quois, 1905; Thomas in 12th Rep. B. A. E., 1894; Thrnston, Antiq. Tenn., 1897;. ANCIENT PUEBLO WARE; DESIGNS IN BLACK ON WHITE GROUND a, Height 8 m. ; '', Height 6 in. Will and Spinden in Peabody Mus. Pa- pers, III, no. 4, 1906; Willoughby (1) in Jour. Am. Folk-lore, x, no. 36,1897, (2) in Putman Mem. Vol., 1909; Wyman in Mem. Peabody Acad. Sci., i, no. 4, 1875. (W. H. H
. Bulletin. Ethnology. MOUND VASES; HUMAN FORMS, ft, Arkansas; Height ef in. '*) Missouri; Height 9+ in. B. A. E., 1883, (2) in 3d Rep. B. A. E., 1884; M. C. Stevenson in 11th Rep. B. A. E., 1894; Stites, Economics of the Iro- quois, 1905; Thomas in 12th Rep. B. A. E., 1894; Thrnston, Antiq. Tenn., 1897;. ANCIENT PUEBLO WARE; DESIGNS IN BLACK ON WHITE GROUND a, Height 8 m. ; '', Height 6 in. Will and Spinden in Peabody Mus. Pa- pers, III, no. 4, 1906; Willoughby (1) in Jour. Am. Folk-lore, x, no. 36,1897, (2) in Putman Mem. Vol., 1909; Wyman in Mem. Peabody Acad. Sci., i, no. 4, 1875. (W. H. H. ) Pottery Hill. The local name of a pre- historic pueblo ruin, oval in shape, meas- uring 228 by 150 ft, situated on the n. side of the Salt and Little Colorado r. watershed, in the White mts., near Lin- den, Navajo co., Ariz.—Hough in Nat. Mus. Rep. 1901, 297, 1903. Potzuye (Fo-tzu-ye). A prehistoric pue- blo of the Tewa, on a mesa w. of the Rio Grande in n. New Mexico, between San Ildefonso pueblo on the n. and the Rite de los Frijoles on the s.—Bandelier in Arch. Inst. Papers, iv, 78, 1892. Pouches. See Bags, Receptacles. Pouxouoma. A former Costanoan vil- lage, said to have been connected with San Juan Bautista mission, Cal.—Engel- hardt. Franc, in Cal., 398, 1897. Powcomonet. A village of the Powhatan confederacy in 1608, on the n. bank of Rappahannockr., in Richmond co.,Va.— Smith (1629), Va., i, map, repr. 1819. Powell. See Osceola. Poweshiek (properly Pdwtshik", 'he who shakes [something] off [himself],' a mas- culine projjer name in the Bear clan, the ruling clan of the Foxes). A Fox chief at the period of the Black Hawk war in 1832. It was he, rather than Keokuk, to whom was due the weakening of Black Hawk's fighting power. The tie which held together the Sauk and Foxes hud for sometime been growing weak, and when Kwaskwamia, a subordinate Sauk chief, ceded away the Rock River country in Illinois, without the knowledge or con- sent of the rest of the pe
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