The following appendix contains a detailed account of graves with catalogue numbers of their contents and other finds, upon which the preceding descriptions are based. Kennewick. 202-8114. Flint chip from the surface. No chips of this quality were found in the Thompson River region. 202-8115. Chipped point made of buff jasper from the surface (Plate II, Fig. 1). 202-8116. Large grooved pebble from the beach of the Columbia River. 202-8117. Chipped pebble from the surface. 202-8118. Broken pestle from the surface. 202-8119. Chipped and battered hammerstone from the surface. (Fig. 43). 202-8120. One half of a sculptured tubular steatite pipe, purchased from Mr. W. F. Sonderman who dug it up while building a flume near Kennewick (Fig. 105). North Yakima. 202-8121. Sculptured handle of a digging stick made of the horn of a Rocky Mountain sheep purchased of Mr. W. Z. York, at Old Yakima, who bought it from an Indian woman living near Union Gap below Old Yakima. She, however, may have brought it from some other locality. (Fig. 126). 202-8122. Tubular steatite pipe (Fig. 104). 202-8123. Pestle made of stone. Presented by Mr. W. M. Gray of North Yakima. Found where the Moxie Ditch enters the flume, about 3 miles northeast of the mouth of the Naches River and southeast of the Yakima River. 202-8124. Fragment of rock painted red. Part of a pictograph showing a human figure with feather headdress (Plate XIV, Fig. 1), taken from the basaltic cliffs southeast of the Naches River above the mouth of Cowiche Creek, about four miles northwest of North Yakima. Several other pictographs were photographed here from the north: Plate XV, Fig. 2 (44480, 4-5), white human heads with feather headdresses and white and red double star figure; Plate XIV, Fig. 2 (44483, 4-8), white human heads with feather headdresses, also (44484, 4-9), Plate XV, Fig. 1 (44485, 4-10); Plate XVI, Fig. 1 (44486, 4-11), and Plate XVI, Fig. 2 (44487, 4-12), white and red human heads with feather headdresses. 202-8125. Six parts of pebbles, from the surface of the flat on the east side of the Yakima River at "The Upper Gap" near the northern end of North Yakima, as samples of what could have been used as material for arrow points. Fig. 129. Sketch Map of the Yakima Valley. Miss Ruth B. Howe Delin.
Numbers 202-8126 to 202-8136 are from the quarry shown in Plate III, Fig. 1 (44488, 5-1 from the south, 44489, 5-2, and 44490, 5-3). This quarry is on the ridge top north of the Naches River, about two miles above its mouth (p. 16). 202-8126. Stone, possibly a hammer. 202-8127. Two river pebbles used as stone hammers. 202-8128. Hammerstone (Fig. 40). 202-8129. Pebble used as a hammer. 202-8130. Fragment of a hammerstone, edge smooth. 202-8131. Two fragments of hammerstones. 202-8132. Four pieces of raw material for chipped implements. 202-8133. Seven pieces of raw material for chipped implements possibly waste from pieces blocked out to be transported or possibly too small or of too poor a quality to be transported. 202-8134. Two pieces of raw material, perhaps chipped. 202-8135. Two pieces of raw material, perhaps too poor to be transported. 202-8136. Thirty pieces of raw material, some very good, some very poor, all apparently waste of pieces blocked out to be transported. No finished or broken implements were found here. Grave No. 1. Plate VI, Fig. 3 (1910) from north of west of the grave before it was disturbed (p. 14). This grave was about 50 feet up the gully from No. 2, and was excavated by us May 18. It was marked by a stick which was very dry but not yet fully decayed. It was located in the rock-slide on the east slope of the gully, a steep ravine going down from the south to a little flat southeast of the Yakima River. This ravine is on the north side of the hill on the east of the Yakima River at the mouth of the Naches River. The grave was about a mile northeast of the mouth of the Naches River, and about 80 feet above the Yakima. From the spot one can see out over the valley of the Yakima. The grave was on a slight, bench, terrace, or place that could be so interpreted. There were large pits and terraces in the slide above this grave, like those shown in Plate VII. Indications of very old charred cedar strips were found across the grave. Charcoal was found among the rocks, and the grave was bounded by a sort of circular balcony of rocks of the rock-slide and had a slight flat or depression in the center. On top, the stones were large, averaging the size of a man's head, some 30 pounds, some 100 pounds, some the size of a man's fist. Below, covering the body, the rocks were small and many were fine, being chipped small from the same rock by fire. All except this burned rock were the common irregular angular rock-slide material. In the bottom of the grave were found adult human bones, partly charred black, the parts not so charred were yellow. Numbers 202-8137 to 202-8152 were found in this grave. 202-8137. Left half of a charred human jaw, parts are ivory black and parts yellowish gray. 202-8138. Part of a human vertebra.
202-8139. Some charred and calcined bones of a dog with the joint end of the tibia showing the articulation pulled off as in youth. Ashes and black fine masses resembling pulverized charcoal were found in the bottom of the grave. The human bones found with these were probably of two skeletons, but all were much broken and charred. Some yellow brown mass, composed of rootlets, maggot sacks, etc., was found at the sides of the grave. 202-8140. At the east side of the grave, a large piece of partly charred cedar about 8 inches wide by 2 inches thick was found. 202-8141. Chipped point of obsidian with base broken off, showing that at least some of the contents of the grave were of prehistoric culture. 202-8142. Finely chipped point made of brown chert found in fire refuse of this grave (Plate II, Fig. 5). 202-8143. Scorched point made of bone (Fig. 9). 202-8144. Part of a point similar to 202-8143 and found with it. 202-8145. Part of a point similar to 202-8143 and found with it. 202-8146. Part of a point similar to 202-8143 and found with it. 202-8147. Tube of rolled brass having the diameter of a lead pencil. Proving this grave to have been made since the prehistoric people were able to reach the whites in trade. 202-8148. Tube similar to 202-8147 (Fig. 75). 202-8149. Charred tube made of bone about 1-¼ inches long. 202-8150. Tube similar to 202-8149 (Fig. 97). 202-8151. Scorched tube made of bone and ornamented by incisions running from one end to the other in a spiral course. The tube is charred and about 1-¼ inches long (Fig. 98). 202-8152. Slate disk perforated in the center and at each side. The object is about 1 inch in diameter and 1/8 inch thick (Fig. 77). Grave No. 2. Rock-slide grave, about 50 feet down the ravine from grave No. 1 and about 40 feet above the flume. It had grass growing in the center. The grave seemed caved in and as if thoroughly walled like a well. It contained nothing, apparently having been rifled. Before excavation this seemed to be more like a grave than No. 1. (See photograph taken from the southwest.) Grave No. 3. Rock-slide grave. 99-4314. Bleached skull and jaw of an adult purchased of a boy who said it was from a rock-slide grave on the north side of the Yakima Ridge lying east of the Yakima River above the Upper Gap. Grave No. 4. Rock-slide grave about 6 feet southeast of grave No. 5 at Selah Canon. As this grave had been opened and the skeleton had been disturbed, no accurate description as to its position can be given. Some of the rock-slide material was quite large, weighing from 200 to 300 lbs; depth, 4 feet; diameter, 3 feet. Decayed wood was found in the grave and long poles on the side of the grave. The grave was probably not very old. 99-4315. Part of skull and skeleton of a youth which was partly bleached. Found in Grave No. 4.
Grave No. 5. Rock-slide grave in Selah Canon and about 6 feet northwest of grave No. 4. Apparently this grave had been rifled. The adult skull lay to the west and was broken. The skeleton was flexed, the feet were toward the east and the knees south of the vertebrae, that is, the skeleton was on the right side. The grave which was about 75 feet up the hillside, and 1-½ miles east of the Yakima River on the south side of Selah Canon, was about 3-½ feet deep by 3-½ feet in diameter. Long poles lay on the side of the grave while decayed wood, leather thongs and dried flesh yet adhering to some of the bones, in this kind of a grave even in such a dry region as this, especially the last two, suggest the grave to be recent. 99-4316. Jaw and skeleton of an adult. Found in grave No. 5. Grave No. 6. Rock-slide grave about 100 feet up the hillside at the top of a rock-slide on a point south of the Yakima River about 2 miles northeast and above the mouth of the Naches River. The bones were found in excavating an adjacent barren grave, 5 feet to the northeast and had probably been thrown out of this one on top of it. Pieces of cedar were scattered around the grave, which had been rifled. Its depth was 5 feet, diameter 5 feet. 99-4317. Skull and one hip bone of an adult. Probably from grave No. 6. Grave No. 7. Rock-slide grave situated northeast of North Yakima and about half a mile northeast of grave No. 6. There is a road near the edge of the grave. The grave had been rifled and pieces of wood were found lying near it; the bones were scattered around and broken. None of them were in anatomical order. Numbers 202-8153 to 202-8156 were found in this grave. 202-8153. One brass bell. 202-8154. Three glass beads. 202-8155. Two shell beads. 202-8156. Three dentalium shells. Grave No. 8. Rifled rock-slide grave. The skeleton which had been wrapped in cedar bark had been taken away. Nothing besides the cedar bark was found. The grave was found near No. 7 and about a half mile northeast of No. 6. Wood was lying near by. There was a road near the edge of the grave which had been rifled. Grave No. 9. Rock-slide grave found near No. 7 which was situated about half a mile northeast of No. 6. The grave contained nothing but charcoal. There was wood lying near by. There was a road near the edge of the grave which had been rifled. Grave No. 10. Rock-slide grave excavated June 2, 1903. This grave was 150 feet up the hill from the Naches River, half a mile above its mouth and on the north side. It was 5 feet long by 6 feet wide and 4 feet deep and had been disturbed and many of the bones thrown out. Dry poles and cedar boards lay around the top. Numbers 99-4318, 202-8157 to 202-8169 were found in this grave.
99-4318. An adult skull and skeleton with abnormality on right malor and with one rib expanded, part of a young adult skeleton and part of a child's skeleton were found. Some of the bones were bleached. The adult and the child were on the bottom. These two bodies had been wrapped in bark and placed in a hole one foot deep in the ground below the slide. The adult's head was to the west southwest. On top and to the east northeast was the young adult. Human hair was also found in grave No. 10. 202-8157. Four parts of the hearth of a fire drill, similar to that used in the Thompson River region. See Teit, (a) p. 203, for descriptions of fire drills (See also Fig. 38.) 202-8158. Wolf or dog bones, some of them bleached. 202-8159. Part of a decorated wooden bow (Fig. 114). 202-8160a, b. Two pieces of a basket. Doubtless of a finer stitch than those from the Thompson River Indians. See Teit, (a), Fig. 131a and Figs. 143 to 146. 202-8161. Piece of coarse coil basket with splint foundation and bifurcated stitch (Fig. 17). 202-8162. Piece of a stitched rush mat (p. 86). The bill of a saw-bill duck was found but not preserved. 202-8163. Copper tubes with six beads, short sections of dentalium shells, which were found from the top to the bottom of the grave. These beads were strung. 202-8164. Four bone tubes found near the bottom and mostly to the east northeast of the grave. 202-8165. Point made of bone found to the west northwest in grave (Fig. 7). 202-8166. A perforated cylinder made of steatite found at about the center of the grave (Fig. 99). 202-8167. Fishbone. 202-8168. Three pieces of yellow jasper (raw material). 202-8169a, b, c. Three small arrow points, one found on center, one in east northeast part and one in south of grave. a is of brownish fissile jasper (Plate II. Fig. 2). Grave No. 11. Rock-slide grave located on the north side of the Naches River, a little over half a mile above its mouth. The place is about 600 feet west southwest of grave No. 10 and 150 feet above the river. It was 6 feet by 4 feet in diameter and 4 feet deep. Apparently it had been rifled as nothing was found in it except a skull and a few bones. 99-4319. Skull, a lower jaw, and a few broken bones which were scattered among the rocks. The skull was found in the west southwest part of the grave with the face down. The lower jaw was found in the southern part of the grave about 1 foot higher up in the rocks. Grave No. 12. Bluff pebble grave. We examined a ring of river boulders on the twenty-acre farm of Mr. James McWhirter, a boy about fifteen years old, twelve miles up the Naches River on the crest of the foothill terrace north of the road, and overlooking the bottom along the north side of the Naches River. This grave was about 150 feet high above the river by about half a mile from it. At first it looked like a little underground house site or a shallow cache pit. (Museum negative, no. 44441, 1-2 for general locality.) James, who called our attention to the pile of boulders, said that some one threw off part in an abandoned attempt to dig the grave. We thought the grave practically undisturbed and it proved to have been the least disturbed of any we had found up to this point. The outside of the ring was 10 feet east and west by 5 feet north and south. The inside of the ring or the space surrounded was 6 feet east and west by 4 feet north and south. Probably this grave was a boulder heap, the aspect of a ring being given by the removal of the stones, i.e., this central space may be where stones were thrown off. River boulders were found from top to bottom. The boulders varied in weight from about 7 to 30 pounds. Most of them were disk-shaped but some were oval. Numbers 99-4320 and 202-8170, 1 were found in this grave. 99-4320. An adult skeleton was found 4 feet deep with the head towards the west, resting on its occiput. The skull which was broken, faced south by east, with the mouth open. The knees were north; the body was on its left side and flexed. Over the north side of the knees was an elliptically-shaped piece of cedar burned on the upper side. It was about 2 feet wide by 4 feet long. A few fragments of the skeleton of a child were found in the grave. All the bones in the grave were very soft and as the ends were broken off we discarded all but the skull and a few of the bones of the child. Two shell disks (202-8170,1) were found about 6 inches apart near the neck, one at the south shoulder, and one at the south side of the skull of the adult. 202-8170. Pendant of disk shape made of oyster shell with one perforation near the edge (Fig. 94). 202-8171 Pendant of disk shape made of shell with two perforations near one edge (Fig. 93). Grave No. 13. Cremation circle, similar to several of the others on the terrace northwest of the mouth of the Naches River. This consisted of a ring of angular rocks among which were no river pebbles, resembling a small underground house site, 8 feet in diameter outside, 6 feet in diameter at the top of the rocks, 4-½ feet in diameter inside, both east-west and north-south. It is widest and built of largest stones on the side towards the lower part of the terrace, suggesting that the ring had slid down but the nearly level terrace would argue against this idea. This grave was like a rock-slide grave, filled with soil, but on a gently sloping terrace instead of a steep slide. Photograph no. 44495, 5-8, from the south shows a telegraph pole to left and a flume across the Yakima River to the right. See also graves No. 14 and 15. Child bones, found two feet deep in volcanic ash, were decayed and discarded. The tibiae were about 2-½ inches long. Grave No. 14. This cremation circle was situated on the terrace about 100 feet above the Naches River and about 250 yards north of the two bridges near its mouth. Plate IX, Fig. 1 (photograph no. 44493, 5-6) shows this from the east with telegraph poles beyond. The stone circle measured 6 feet north and south inside (16 outside) by 7 feet east and west inside (14 outside). Our excavation here was 6 by 5 by 4 feet deep. Fragments of charred human bones, and some that seemed not to be charred, of six or seven individuals were found from about 1 foot deep down to 4 feet deep. Most of these were pieces of skulls, but pieces of many other bones were found. The bones which were most burned, were those found nearest the surface. Much charcoal was seen. A layer of ashes about 6 inches in thickness was found in the center. In the northwest part of the hole a skeleton was found lying on the left side flexed, the face east, and the head north. This may have been buried after the others. The bones were very much decomposed and the skull was broken into small pieces. Numbers 202-8172 to 202-8174 were found in this grave. 202-8172. A shell ornament found on the east side of the skull. 202-8173. Two dentalium shells found on the west side of the skull. Dentalium shells were found in all parts of the excavation but were most numerous in the northeastern parts. 202-8174. A shell ornament. Grave No. 15. Cremation circle excavated on June 10, 11 and 12. Shown from the east in photograph No. 44494, 5-7. It is 56 feet west of grave No. 14 and further up the terrace. The outside circle of stones measured 15 feet north and south by 15 feet east and west. The next circle of stones measured 9 feet north and south by 9 feet east and west. The space inside the stone circle measured 7 feet north and south by 7 feet east and west. The depth varied from 2 feet 6 inches in the east and south parts to 4 feet in the north and west parts below all of which was a pitching layer of basaltic rocks. The three rings of stones surrounded a hollow. The inner row was about 12 inches lower than the outer ring. Several boulders were found in the grave. Ashes and lava composed the grave soil. The whole cremation circle seemed to have been the burned remains of a communal or family depository for the dead, probably a hut like an underground winter house walled around the edge of the roof with stones. Two skeletons were found on the bottom, apparently not burned, but much decayed. They were discarded. Numbers 202-8175 to 202-8182 were found in this grave. 202-8175. Charcoal was abundant but most of it was found about 14 inches deep. 202-8176. Broken and charred human bones of about twelve individuals were found throughout the grave in a space about 8 by 5 feet beginning at the east inner ring of stones and extending beyond the second circle on the west. They were found from 8 inches deep to parts of the bottom. 202-8177. Dentalium shells were very abundant. 202-8178. Engraved dentalium shells (Fig. 118). 202-8179. Several kinds of shell ornaments were found in the northern and northwestern parts of the grave. 202-8180. Several burned pieces of shell. 202-8181. One piece of metal, probably copper. 202-8182. Several pieces of shell of different kinds.
Grave No. 16. Shallow cremation circle, 13 feet north and south by 14 east and west (outside); 5 feet north and south by 7 feet east and west (inside). Charred human bones of a child about 10 years old were found. Grave No. 17. Cremation circle situated 58 feet west from grave No. 15 and 46 feet west from grave No. 16. Its diameter was 13 feet east and west by 14 feet north and south outside of all stones. The diameter was 5 feet east and west by 6 feet north and south inside. At the middle of the stone ring the diameter was 9 feet. The middle of the excavation was 3 feet deep in volcanic ash. No evidence of burning was found among the bones except the presence of charcoal at a depth of four feet. Parts of at least four skeletons, one adult, and children were found, all much broken and separated. The bones were mostly in the southwestern end of the excavation. No skull bones were found except a lower jaw, while in grave No. 13 most of the pieces found were of skulls. Numbers 202-8183 to 202-8185 were found here. 202-8183. Three shell ornaments found in the northeastern part of the grave. 202-8184. Two dentalium shells found in the western part of the excavation. These were the only two found in the whole grave. 202-8185. Piece of copper found in the northwestern part of the grave. Grave No. 18. Cremation circle situated 84 feet south of grave No. 14. This grave had possibly been rifled. The stone circle was 15 feet in diameter outside and 9 feet in diameter inside. The excavation was 2 feet, 6 inches to 3 feet 6 inches deep. Excavation 7 feet by 6 feet. Some fragments of human bones were found on the surface. There were more stones mixed in the earth than in the graves previously excavated here; viz: Nos. 13 to 17. Ashes were abundant especially at the bottom. Many pieces of much broken human bones were found but not as many as were seen in grave No. 15 and they were less burned than in that grave. Numbers 202-8186 to 202-8187 were found in this grave. 202-8186. Two engraved dentalium shells. 202-8187. Two dentalium shells of which one was crushed and discarded. A broken flat shell ornament which we also discarded, was found here. Graves Nos. 19-20. These cremation circles were of the usual construction, showed nothing new and contained no specimens. Grave No. 21. Cremation rectangle last explored on the terrace near the mouth of the Naches River and situated 300 feet northwest from the two bridges. The rectangular enclosure was bounded by a single row of stones, but on the south several rows were placed outside to conform with the slope of the hill covering a semi-circular area, while on the west was a second row of marking stones. It was 12 feet long north and south by 8 feet wide east and west and 3 feet, 6 inches deep. Part of a child's skull, two scapulae, two tibiae, and a piece of a femur of another child; bones of a young adult; a small piece of skull and part of a femur of an adult were found. All the bones were in a poor state of preservation. Numbers 202-8188 to 202-8189 were found in this grave. 202-8188. Dentalium shells. 202-8189. A shell ornament was found in this excavation. A piece of beaver tooth and several pieces of decayed cedar were also found and discarded. 99-4321. See grave No. 25. Grave No. 22. Rock-slide grave located near the top of the slide and above the flume on the southern side of the Yakima Ridge on the northern side of the Yakima River about a mile eastward from the mouth of the Naches River. Traces of wrappings of stitched rush matting were seen in the grave. 99-4322. Adult skeleton, partly bleached, flexed on back, head north as shown in situ after removing covering rocks in photograph (no. 44516, 7-6 from the south by west), Plate VIII, Fig. 2 (pp. 15 and 142). Grave No. 23. A grave 600 feet up on the plateau south of Oak Spring Canon, in a dome-shaped mound of volcanic ash left by the wind. It was not like a rock-slide grave. Somewhat angular stones unlike rock-slide material among which were no pebbles, formed a rectangular pile, 15 feet long by 12 feet wide. The grave contained many stones, several modern beads, evidently part of a rosary, two dentalium shells and a human lower jaw, but all were discarded. Grave No. 24. This grave was located in a dome of volcanic ash on the hill or plateau north of the Ahtanum River and northwest of Mr. A. D. Eglin's house near Tampico. It was marked by a rectangular group of rough and wind smoothed rocks (not rock-slide or river pebble) which extended down as in the crude cairns, 6 feet northeast and southwest by 4 feet wide northwest and southeast, the vault being 5 feet by 3 feet. Numbers 99-4323 and 202-8190 were found in this grave. 99-4323. A skeleton of a child found in a very much decomposed condition. Some of the bones showed anchylosis. The skull was found in the southwest of the grave with part of the pelvis, two humerii and a scapula. The rest of the skeleton was scattered, the lower jaw being in the northwest corner of the grave with the femora, tibiae and fibulae. The skull faced northeast and rested on the occiput. 202-8190. Bone point found at the side of the skull. 99-4324. See grave No. 27. Grave No. 25. Eglin stone grave located in a volcanic ash knoll left behind by wind and surrounded by 'scab land' on the bottom land about 18 miles up and west of North Yakima or nearly to Tampico, Yakima County, and on the north side of the river road, but east of the north and south branch road which is east of Mr. Sherman Eglin's place; about 600 feet north of the north branch of the Ahtanum river and about 15 feet above the water level. Over the grave was a stone heap of angular basalt about 8 feet in diameter. At a depth of 3 feet, after finding stones all the way down, was a cyst (Negative, nos. 44498, 5-11 and 44499, 5-12, reproduced in Plate X, from the same station looking east), made up of slabs averaging 2 inches in maximum thickness with thin sharp edges about 2 feet by 18 inches and smaller. There were two such cover stones, some at the sides and ends. Sometimes two or three such slabs were found parallel or overlapping. There were no slabs or floor below the skeleton. This grave resembled very much the stone graves of Ohio and Kentucky except that the slabs were not of limestone and there was a pile of rocks over the stone cyst. Numbers 99-4321, and 202-8191 to 202-8195 were found in this grave. 99-4321. In the cyst about on a level with the lower edges of the enclosing slabs was the skeleton of a child about six years old with head west, face north, and the knees flexed on the left side. The skull was slightly deformed by occipital pressure (Plate X). 202-8191. Horizontally under the vertebrae was found an engraved slab of antler in the form of a costumed human figure with the engraved surface up (Fig. 121). 202-8192. Dentalium shells were found under the body, from the neck to the pelvis. 202-8193. Ten engraved dentalium shells (Fig. 117). 202-8194. A bit of bone. 202-8195. Charcoal found in this grave. The grave (No. 25) and its contents seem to antedate the advent of the white race in this region or at least show no European influence. 99-4322 to 99-4323. See graves nos. 22 to 24. Grave No. 26. Rock-marked grave in a dome left by the wind near the pasture gate on Mr. A. D. Eglin's place and about half a mile north of his house near Tampico. A heap of somewhat angular wind abraded rock some being smooth, (none being river pebbles or rock-slide material) marked the grave and extended below the surface about two feet. Then about 1 foot of earth intervened between them and thin rocks found around the bones of a very young child. The skull was in the northwest end of the grave and was disarticulated. The depth was 4 feet, the length of the excavation 4 feet, and the width 3 feet. The skeleton was found with the head northwest and the pelvis southeast. A grave with outward appearance resembling this except that it had river pebbles among the stones of the pile is shown in Fig. 2, Plate IX, (Negative no. 44497, 5-10 taken from the north of east). Grave No. 27. Rock-marked grave in a dome of volcanic ash left by the wind located about half a mile north of Mr. A. D. Eglin's house near Tampico. This grave was like a rude cairn being rudely walled and found filled with earth and stones as well as covered by rocks of which eight or nine weighing about 15 or 20 pounds, showed above the surface of the ground. Its depth was 4 feet, length 5 feet, and its width, 3 feet 6 inches, extending west southwest and east northeast. A little charcoal was found in this grave also. 99-4324. Adult skeleton found flexed on left side, facing northeast. Grave No. 28. Rock-slide grave located in a small irregular rock-slide on the north side of Cowiche Creek about 3 miles west of its mouth and about 40 feet above the road. The rocks were piled up in a crescent-shaped ridge on the lower side of the grave. Four sticks about four feet long were found planted upright among the stones. The grave extended east and west. Parts of a human skeleton were found. It was in a flexed position, head west, skull and the bones of the upper part of the body broken and decomposed. The bones of the lower part of the body were well preserved. The skeleton had been wrapped in matting or bark, several pieces of matting being found in the grave as well as parts of a basket. Numbers 202-8196a and 202-8196b were found in this grave. 202-8196a. Chipped point of mottled quartz found near the skull (Plate II, Fig. 3). 202-8196b. Chipped point of white quartz found near the skull (Plate II, Fig. 4). 202-8197. Pestle or roller made of stone from the surface about a mile east of Fort Simcoe. This is of cylindrical shape tapering to both ends but to one more than to the other. Both ends are fractured (Fig. 37). Grave No. 29. Rock-marked grave located on a plateau above Wenas Creek near its mouth and about seven miles north of North Yakima. The rocks marking the grave covered a space 6 feet by 4 feet and extended down to the skeleton which was very much broken but not decomposed. No objects other than some charcoal were found in this grave. All the other graves in the vicinity of the mouth of Wenas Creek seem to have been rifled. 202-8198. Broken ulna of a deer found at the mouth of Wenas Creek about 7 miles north of North Yakima. Numbers 202-8199 to 202-8204 were found on the surface at the mouth of Wenas Creek. 202-8199. Small chipped point made of red jasper. 202-8200a-c. Three chipped points made of white chert. 202-8201. Broken and burned chipped point made of white chert. 202-8202. Broken triangular chipped point made of white chert. 202-8203. Chipped point made of reddish white chert (Plate II. Fig. 13). 202-8204 a, b. Two chipped pieces of white chalcedony. Numbers 202-8205a-e to 202-8206f were found in the valley of Wenas Creek, on the surface near where the trail from North Yakima to Ellensburg crosses the creek, about 7 miles north of North Yakima. 202-8205a-e. Five pieces of agate of reddish or amber color. 202-8205f. Agate of whitish color 202-8206a. A chip of stone. 202-8206b-e. Four pieces of stone. 202-8206f. Chip of stone. Numbers 202-8207 to 202-8209 were found on the surface at the mouth of Wenas Creek.
202-8207. Pestle made of stone. 202-8208. Pestle made of stone. 202-8209. Broken pebble, battered on the side. 202-8210. Fragment of a pestle made of stone of nearly square cross section. Found on the surface three miles north of Clemen's ranch, on Wenas Creek where the trail from North Yakima to Ellensburg crosses. 202-8211. Pestle found about 28 miles north of North Yakima, on the trail to Ellensburg. It was in a dry creek in "Kittitass" Canon. This canon is probably the Manastash not the "Kittitass," as we were told. Ellensburg. 202-8212. Base of a triangular chipped point made of jasper found on the surface near the town reservoir on the ridge east of Ellensburg. Numbers 202-8213 to 202-8222 were found on the surface of the bottom land west of Cherry Creek, near Ellensburg. The place was a village site and is on the farm of Mr. Bull near where an east and west road crosses the creek, and opposite where the creek touches on the east, the west base of the upland. At this point the creek comes up to the upland from the lowland to the north (p. 12). 202-8213. Chipped boulder. 202-8214. Notched boulder, or net sinker. 202-8215. Battered pebble. 202-8216. Four burned stones. 202-8217. Gritstone, probably a whetstone. 202-8218. Pebble. 202-8219. Unio shells. 202-8220. Six chips. 202-8221. Scraper chipped from chalcedony (Fig. 52). 202-8222. Chipped point of heart shape made of clove brown jasper. (Plate II, Fig. 12). Grave No. 30. Stone circle located on the crest of a western extension of the Saddle Mountains on Mr. Bull's farm, east of Cherry Creek and about seven miles south of Ellensburg. The place is east of the village site above-mentioned which is on the bottom land along the west side of the creek at this point. A circular ring of stones, 10 feet in diameter marked the grave. Smaller stones and earth in the middle extended 3 feet 6 inches down to the skeleton. No objects were found except a plentiful supply of charcoal. 99-4325. The bones of an adult human skeleton which appeared as if it had been flexed were found very much out of anatomical order. It lay northeast and southwest in the southeast part of the grave. There was a large hole in the right frontal of the skull which lay facing the northwest. The lower jaw was found on top of the skull with its angle east. Fragments of the tibiae were blackened by fire. Grave No. 31. Rock-slide grave located in the rock-slide on the west side of the bluff, a western extension of the Saddle Mountains, east of Cherry Creek and about half a mile southwest of Mr. Bull's house. One small piece of decayed wood was found projecting above the rock-slide, and it was the only indication of the grave, there being no cavity over it. Among the rocks, four more posts were found, one at each corner of the grave. These had evidently rotted off even with the surface, having formerly, no doubt, extended above it. The depth of the grave was from 2 to 3 feet, according to the slope of the hill. Numbers 99-4326 and 202-8223 to 202-8228 were found in this grave. 99-4326. Skeleton of a child with anchylosed neck vertebrae. Some of the bones were bleached. The bones were very much displaced, the skull being found in the middle of the grave and some of the vertebrae being found near the surface, but most of the bones were around the skull. The body dressed and wrapped in matting had been placed between four large boulders. 202-8223. Fragments of leather or skin clothing. 202-8224. Dentalium shells. 202-8225. Glass beads. 202-8226. Three bracelets made of iron (Fig. 96). 202-8227. A bone disk with central perforation (Fig. 80). 202-8228. A bit of a fresh water shell. Grave No. 32. Rock-slide grave located about 30 feet south southwest of grave No. 31 and in the same rock-slide. It had the same characteristics but had evidently been disturbed, the skull being missing. No artifacts were found in the grave. 99-4327. Adult skeleton without skull and some bones of a little child. The bones of an adult were found in a heap except the vertebrae which lay extended full length; cervical vertebrae to the north. The bones of one ankle, a tibia, and fibula were diseased. The cervical vertebrae are anchylosed; and one of the ribs is abnormal. The bones of the knees are partly bleached. The bones of the child being found between the ribs and the pelvis suggest that it was foetal. Grave No. 33. Rock-slide grave located 40 feet south southwest from grave No. 31 in the same rock-slide with it. There was nothing on the surface to indicate this grave, but below the surface of the slide on the upper side of the grave, were three rows of sticks, about 3 feet long, standing vertically and close to each other. These seemed to be so placed that they would prevent the slide from further movement towards the grave. The grave cavity was 5 feet south southeast by 4 feet east northeast and 4 feet deep on one side, 3 feet on the other, or averaging about 3-½ feet deep, and extending into the soil below the slide. Numbers 99-4328 and 202-8229 to 202-8230 were found in this grave. 99-4328. In the bottom of the grave the skeleton of a youth was found. It was in good condition, lying on its back, facing west, but having rolled westward. The legs were flexed so that the femora lay at right angles or to the southeast of the pelvis, and the tibiae and fibulae lay parallel to them. The arms lay extended at the sides of the body with the hands on the pelvis. Three of the arm bones and one pelvis bone are stained by copper. The tibia of a child was found with these. 202-8229. Mat of twined rushes found under the pelvis. The rushes were stitched together in pairs with cord and each pair was twisted once between each stitch (Fig. 71). 202-8230. Open twine matting of rushes held together with cords woven around them, skin with hair on it, and in this were copper beads strung with beads made of dentalium shells on a leather thong (Fig. 72). Grave No. 34. Rock-slide grave found 5 feet south southwest of grave No. 32. There were no surface indications of the grave. Posts of decayed wood were found extending from the surface down to about 6 inches from the bottom. The tops appeared to have been cut off and probably never extended above the surface. Numbers 99-4329 and 202-8231 to 202-8246 were found in this grave. 99-4329. The skeleton of a young child with a persistent frontal suture was found at a depth of from 3 to 4 feet with the head east, trunk on back, femora at right angles to tibiae, and fibulae parallel to them, flexed to left or south. 202-8231. Skin with the hair on found on body. 202-8232. Matting. 202-8233. Several rows of beads, some of copper, others of glass and still others of sections of dentalium shells were found at the neck, arms and legs. These are strung on pieces of thong, some of which are wound at the ends. Some of them are on coarse twisted, and others on fine twisted plant fibre (Fig. 74). 202-8234a, b. Two pendants made of haliotis shell were found, one near the head and one at the pelvis (Fig. 91). 202-8235a, b. Two copper pendants were found at the legs, b has a thong in the perforation. 202-8236a-d. Four bracelets made of copper found on the arms (Fig. 95). 202-8237. Teeth of a rodent found in the grave. 202-8238. A square pendant made of copper with a thong and bead made of copper (Fig. 78). 202-8239. A pendant made of copper (Fig. 83). 202-8240. A bit of wood bounding a knot hole. 202-8241. Two dentalium shells. 202-8242. A piece of iron. 202-8243. Woodpecker feathers, some bound at the tips with fabric, one with feather, and fur or moss. 202-8244. A copper ornament found among the rocks over this grave about 1 foot deep. 202-8245. A pendant made of brass with thong and bead made of copper found among the rocks over this grave about 1 foot deep (Fig. 84). 202-8246. A pendant made of copper with thong found about 1 foot deep among the rocks over this grave (Fig. 82). Grave No. 35. Rock-slide grave located in the same slide with Nos. 31, 32, 33 and 34, 8 feet to the south southwest of No. 34. The grave was 3 feet in diameter by 4 feet deep. Four posts of poplar were found at the corners of this grave but these did not show above the surface being decayed down to within 6 or 8 inches of the ground under the rock-slide. Sticks had also been used to mark this grave on the surface. Numbers 99-4330 and 202-8247 to 202-8249 were found in this grave. 99-4330. The skeleton of a youth was found resting on its back with the head to the east, arms at the sides, legs flexed at right angles, i.e., to the north. Two buttons, one of bone and one of pearl, or shell, and a bridle bit were found in the grave, but were discarded. 202-8247. A bit of shell. 202-8248. Thirteen cones made of iron (Fig. 86). 202-8249. Two pendants made of iron (Fig. 85). Grave No. 36. A rock-enclosure burial located on the hill south of Mr. Bull's house near the gap south of Ellensburg and about 300 feet north of grave No. 30. This burial was the southwestern of a group of eight, all very close together and of which the southern circular enclosure of five had been rifled although the three oblong enclosures were intact. There were traces of human bones in all of the eight enclosures. The enclosure to the north contained a skeleton that had been burned. No. 36 differed from No. 30 in that the stones did not extend below the surface. 99-4331. At a depth of 3 feet, in the grave pit 5 feet by 3 feet was the skeleton of an adult lying with the head north, face east, on the left side, arms extended to pelvis, legs flexed to left, i.e., to east. No specimens were found in this enclosure. Grave No. 37. A rock-slide grave was located about 10 feet west of grave No. 35 and was similar to it in general character. Numbers 99-4332 and 202-8250 to 202-8258 were found in this grave. 99-4332. The very much decomposed skeleton of a child was found here. The broken skull was preserved. 202-8250a, b. Two fragments of antler, perhaps part of an implement found about 1 inch above the pelvis. 202-8251. A triangular copper object with two perforations found inside the skull. 202-8252. A pendant or nose ornament made of haliotis shell and stained pink in places found on the lower jaw (Fig. 92). 202-8253. Dentalium shells. 202-8254. A long shell pendant with two perforations. 202-8255. A pendant made of haliotis shell bearing a pink stain with a perforation and part of a second perforation (Fig. 90). 202-8256. A long shell pendant with one perforation. 202-8257a, b. Two triangular objects made of shell. 202-8258. Pieces of shell found near the lower jaw. Priest Rapids. 202-8259. One pebble showing use at the end as a pestle. Found on the surface of the divide 25 miles east of Ellensburg, and about 15 miles west of Mr. Craig's house near the head of Priest Rapids.
202-8260a, b. Pieces of a pestle made of part of a column of basalt, with the corners rounded by pecking. Found on the surface at the head of Priest Rapids on the west side of the river. 202-8261. A pestle made by rounding the edges of a piece of a basaltic column. Found on the surface of the west bank of the Columbia River 8 miles above Mr. Craig's house, which is at the head of Priest Rapids. Numbers 202-8262 to 202-8266 were found on the surface near the head of Priest Rapids. 202-8262. A pestle or part of a pestle. 202-8263. A river pebble partly pecked into the form of a pestle (Fig. 22). 202-8264. The end of a pestle having a large striking head. 202-8265. Part of a stone pestle. 202-8266. Pestle formed by rounding the corners of a small basaltic column. 202-8267. to 202-8290. Numbers 202-8267 to 202-8290 are pestles made of stone found on the surface near the head of Priest Rapids (Fig. 21, 202-8281). Numbers 202-8291 to 202-8295 were found on the surface near the head of Priest Rapids. 202-8291. Part of a pestle made of stone. 202-8292a. A pebble battered on each end (Fig. 41). 202-8292b. Pebble, one side of which has been used as a mortar. 202-8293. Part of a mortar made of stone. 202-8294. Part of a mortar. 202-8295. Disk-shaped boulder, one side of which is notched opposite a natural notch. Possibly this has been a net sinker similar to the following. Numbers 202-8296 to 202-8334 were found on the surface of the bank of the Columbia River near the head of Priest Rapids. 202-8296. River pebble. Such pebbles were made into sinkers for fish nets. See 202-8310 and adjacent catalogue numbers (Fig. 13a). 202-8297. Scraper or knife made of a river pebble one side of which is chipped (Fig. 55). 202-8298. River pebble of disk shape, partly chipped. 202-8299. River pebble of disk shape, partly chipped on two edges. 202-8300. River pebble of disk shape, partly chipped on one edge. 202-8301. River pebble of disk shape, partly chipped on two edges. 202-8302. River pebble of disk shape, partly chipped on four edges (Fig. 53). 202-8303. River pebble, partly chipped. 202-8304. River pebble of disk shape, chipped around the edge from one side only. 202-8305. Disk-shaped river pebble, chipped around the edge from both sides. 202-8306. Disk-shaped river pebble, chipped in two places, opposite each other from both sides, and at a place equi-distant from these two from only one side. 202-8307. Scraper or knife chipped from a pebble (Fig. 54). 202-8308. Chipped pebble. 202-8309 to 202-8322. Numbers 202-8309 to 202-8322 are oblong flat river pebbles with a notch chipped in the edge at each end from both sides. They are probably sinkers for fish nets. (202-8313, see Fig. 13c; 202-8318, see Fig. 13b).
202-8323 to 202-8325. Numbers 202-8323 to 202-8325 are oval flat river pebbles with pieces chipped from the edges in several places. 202-8326. Flat oval river pebble with pieces chipped from both sides of the edge at five places, probably a sinker for a fish net. 202-8327. Flat disk-shaped pebble with four notches about equi-distant around the edge, and chipped from each side, probably a sinker for a fish net. 202-8328. Oval river pebble with four notches chipped in the edge nearly equi-distant from each other, probably a sinker for a fish net. 202-8329. Oval flat river pebble with four notches chipped in the edge from both sides, and about equi-distant from each other, probably a sinker for a fish net. 202-8330. Oval flat river pebble with four notches chipped in the edge from both sides, and about equi-distant from each other, probably a sinker for a fish net (Fig. 13d). 202-8331. Half of a stone ring, probably a sinker for a fish net. 202-8332. Boulder in which groove is partly pecked, probably a net sinker or anchor. 202-8333. Large chipped implement made of basalt (Plate I, Fig. 1). 202-8334. Large chipped form made of white chert (Plate I, Fig. 3). Numbers 202-8335 to 202-8383 were found on the surface near the head of Priest Rapids. 202-8335. Chipped form. 202-8336. Chipped form of white chalcedony (Fig. 3). 202-8337. Chipped form. 202-8338. Chipped form made of red jasper (Plate I, Fig. 2). 202-8339 to 202-8344. Numbers 202-8339 to 202-8344 are chipped forms. 202-8345. Basal half of a chipped point. 202-8346. Half of a chipped form. 202-8347. Point of a chipped form. 202-8348. Part of a chipped form. 202-8349 to 202-8354. Numbers 202-8349 to 202-8354 are points of chipped forms. 202-8355. Triangular chipped point. 202-8356. Triangular chipped point. 202-8357. Chipped form. 202-8358. Chipped point. 202-8359. Chipped point made of brown horn stone (Plate II, Fig. 11). 202-8360. Triangular chipped point made of pale yellow chalcedony. The chalcedony is flint-like in texture (Plate II, Fig. 14). 202-8361. Chipped point made of yellow agate (Plate II, Fig. 10). 202-8362. Chipped point. 202-8363. Chipped point made of pale fulvous chalcedony (Plate II, Fig. 8). 202-8364. Chipped arrow, knife or spear point made of chalcedony (Fig. 2). 202-8365. Chipped arrow, spear or knife point. 202-8366. Chipped arrow point made of pale fulvous chalcedony (Plate II, Fig. 7).
202-8367. Chipped arrow point. 202-8368. Chipped arrow point made of opaline whitish chalcedony (Plate II, Fig. 9). 202-8369. Chipped arrow point made of chalcedony (Fig. 1). 202-8370. Point for a drill chipped from chert (Fig. 48). 202-8371. Scraper chipped from petrified wood (Fig. 49). 202-8372. Scraper chipped from agate (Fig. 50). 202-8373. Scraper chipped from chalcedony (Fig. 51). 202-8374. Chipped piece of chalcedony. 202-8375. Chipped piece of petrified wood. 202-8376. Flake of stone. 202-8377. Flake of stone. 202-8378a. Piece of antler showing knife marks. 202-8378b. Part of a wedge made of antler. 202-8379. A piece of antler that has been whittled. 202-8380a, b, c. Three pieces of antler. 202-8381. Bleached barb for a fish spear made of bone (Fig. 12). 202-8382. Six clam shells from the Columbia River. 202-8383. Seventeen clam shells from the old shell bed shown in Plate V, Fig. 1. 202-8384. Four shell disks found among the refuse of a rock-slide grave near the head of Priest Rapids (Fig. 76). 202-8385. One dentalium shell found among the refuse of a rock-slide grave near the head of Priest Rapids. 202-8386. Pendant made of haliotis shell, triangular in form, perforated at the most acute corner. This shell came from the Pacific Coast. Found in the grave of a child in a rock-slide near the head of Priest Rapids west of the Columbia River near the home of Mr. Craig (Fig. 89). Numbers 202-8387 to 202-8390 were also found here. 202-8387a, b, c, d. Vertebrae of a fish. 202-8388. Pendant made of a shell probably a young Pectunculus gigantea. The hinge side has been smoothed off (Fig. 88). 202-8389. Three dentalium shells. 202-8390. Twenty-eight shell disks or beads. Grave No. 38. A rock-slide grave located on the east side of the escarpment that runs south to the Columbia River about two miles southwest of Mr. Craig's house near the head of Priest Rapids. Stones were heaped up over this grave and sticks about 6 feet long were standing up and extended from the earth above the skeleton to 3 feet above the surface. Numbers 99-4333 and 202-8391 to 202-8392 were found in the grave. 99-4333. An adult skeleton was found at a depth of 3 feet from the top of the rock heap. The head was east. The skeleton was flexed and it was lying on the left side. 202-8391. Stitched rush matting, probably recent, found in contact with the skin on this skeleton (Fig. 70). Part was of the stitch shown in Fig. 71. 202-8392. A roll of birch bark. Grave No. 39. Grave of a child near grave No. 38. This child's grave was of the same kind as grave No. 38. 202-8393. Pendant or bead made of sea shell (Fig. 87).
Grave No. 40. A rock-slide grave found 8 miles above Mr. Craig's house in a small slide at the foot of the bluff. Upright cedar slabs about 8 feet long were found along about 6 feet of the lower part of the grave. The skeleton of an adult lay flexed along the slabs with the head to the north. 99-4334. The skull. Several similar graves, most of which have been rifled, were seen at this place. Grave No. 41. Grave found about 5 miles south of Mr. Craig's house on the western bank of the Columbia. It was in the sand, covered with flat river boulders. No artifacts were found in the grave. 99-4335. Adult skeleton, bleached. Much of the skeleton was found exposed and parts were missing. The head was north. Grave No. 42. Boulder-covered grave in sand was located at the edge of the river 12 miles up the Columbia from Mr. Craig's house. Numbers 99-4336 and 202-8394 to 202-8395 were found in this grave. 99-4336. An adult skeleton was found in this grave with the head north, face down, and flexed. 202-8394. Fragment of a large mortar made of stone (Fig. 18). 202-8395a, b, c. Three pestles found among the covering boulders of this grave. Numbers 202-8396 to 202-8398 were presented by Mrs. J. B. Davidson of Ellensburg. The specimens were collected at the head of Priest Rapids. 202-8396. Pipe made of limestone decorated with the circle and dot design similar to that used in the Thompson River region (Fig. 106 also negative 44505, 6-6). 202-8397. Double notched point chipped from black glassy basalt or trap (Plate II, Fig. 6). 202-8398. Point for a drill or perforator chipped from chalcedony (Fig. 47). 202-8399. River pebble partly pecked into the form of a pestle. Found on the surface 8 miles above the head of Priest Rapids (Fig. 23). Various Localities. Numbers 20.0-1463 to 20.0-1471 were collected and presented by Mr. D. W. Owen of Kennewick. 20.0-1463. Bone object broken and partly missing from Blalock Island fifteen miles below Umatilla in the Columbia River. 20.0-1464. Wedge made of antler from the surface near the Columbia River near the mouth of the Snake River (Fig. 39). 20.0-1465. Bleached awl made of bone from an island in the Columbia River, forty miles above the mouth of the Snake River (Fig. 57). 20.0-1466. Bleached awl made of bone from the surface of an island in the Columbia River near the mouth of the Snake River (Fig. 56). 20.0-1467. Awl made of brownish bone nearly circular in section with five incised lines on two sides, four on one, and none on the other which is plain because worn smooth probably by age or use. From a grave on Blalock Island, a long island in the Columbia River fifteen miles below Umatilla. 20.0-1468. Awl made of brownish bone. The shaft has nearly parallel sides and rounded corners but the base is nearly circular in section. Striations such as are made by a gritstone show on the surface. Found with another in a grave on an island in the Snake River five miles above its mouth (Fig. 10). 20.0-1469. Sculptured arm with hand made of black slate having four nearly parallel sides and rounded corners. From Umatilla, Oregon. 20.0-1470. Pipe made of sandstone bearing design. From the Snake River Indians (Figs. 107 and 115). 20.0-1471. Sculptured handle broken from a club made of serpentine. The broken surface is smooth. There are notches ¼ inch long on the edge. From Blalock Island opposite Umatilla in the Columbia Valley (Fig. 167h, Smith, (b).). 20.0-3343. Fluted stone, possibly an unfinished pestle. From near Lewiston, Idaho. Presented by Mr. Henry Fair, Spokane, Idaho. Numbers 20.0-3344 to 20.0-3346 are from an old village site near Fort Simcoe. Collected by Dr. H. J. Spinden. 20.0-3344. Mortar. 20.0-3345. Pestle. 20.0-3346. Pestle. T-21184 (H-180). Fragment of a leaf-shaped point made of chert. From Wallula near the Columbia River, Oregon. Collected by Judge James Kennedy in 1882 (Fig. 6). T-22107 (H-177). Fragments of a figure made of antler. From Umatilla, Oregon. Collected by Mrs. James Terry (Fig. 123). [Pg 172] [Pg 173] [Pg 174] [Pg 175] Plate I. Plate II. [Pg 176] [Pg 177] Plate III. House Site near Naches River. (Page 51) [Pg 178] [Pg 179] Plate IV. House Sites near Naches River. (Page 52) [Pg 180] [Pg 181] Plate V. Camp Sites near Sentinal Bluffs. (Page 56) [Pg 182] [Pg 183] Plate VI. Fort near Rock Creek. Rock-Slide Grave on Yakima Ridge. (Page 14) [Pg 184] [Pg 185] Plate VII. Terraced Rock-Slide on Yakima Ridge. (Page 141) [Pg 186] [Pg 187] Plate VIII. Rock-Slide Graves on Yakima Ridge. (Page 140) [Pg 188] [Pg 189] Plate IX. Cremation Circle near Mouth of Naches River. (Page 142) Grave in Dome of Volcanic Ash near Tampico. (Page 139) [Pg 190] [Pg 191] Plate X. Opened Grave in Dome of Volcanic Ash near Tampico (Page 139) [Pg 192] [Pg 193] Plate XI. Petroglyphs Near Sentinal Bluffs. (Page 121) [Pg 194] [Pg 195] Plate XII. [Pg 196] [Pg 197] Plate XIII. Petroglyph near Wallula Junction. (Page 123) [Pg 198] [Pg 199] Plate XIV. Pictographs at Mouth of Cowiche Creek. (Page 119) [Pg 200] [Pg 201] Plate XV. Pictographs at Mouth of Cowiche Creek. (Page 120) [Pg 202] [Pg 203] Plate XVI. Pictographs at Mouth of Cowiche Creek. (Page 120)
TRANSCRIBER NOTES: Archaic, alternate and misspellings of words have been retained to match the original work with the exception of those listed below. Missing punctuation has been added and obvious punctuation errors have been corrected. Some page numbers have been removed to maintain text consistency. Any reference to size, i.e. ½ nat. size, in the illustrations has not been retained. Page 19: "gulley" changed to "gully" (on either side by a gully). Page 51: footnote 78, added "p." (Spinden, p. 194.) Page 82: "anterio" changed to "anterior" (leaving a large anterior lateral projection). Page 92: "assymetrical" changed to "asymmetrical" (a slightly asymmetrical disk). Page 93: illustration caption: "n" changed to "in" (in the collection of). Page 97: "he" changed to "be" (contents will be found). Page 108: "begining" changed to "beginning" (first beginning at the East). Page 108: "untill" changed to "until" (held the pipe until I took). Page 109: "simitransparent" changed to "semi-transparent" (where the semi-transparent green steatite). Page 113: "p. 13" changed to "p. 131" (under the section of art on p. 131.) Page 129: "fo" changed to "of" (and the method of indicating). Page 145: "familar" changed to "familiar" (not be one merely familiar with). Page 149: "Bibiography" changed to "Bibliography." Page 160: "tibiÆ" changed to "tibiae" and "fibulÆ" changed to "fibulae" for consistency. |
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