[156] I failed to find out how the Hopi regard fossils.

[157] These objects were eagerly sought by the Hopi women who visited the camps at Awatobi and Sikyatki.

[158] The tubular form of pipe was almost universal in the pueblo area, and I have deposited in the National Museum pipes of this kind from several ruins in the Rio Grande valley.

[159] Journal of American Ethnology and Archæology, vol. iv, pp. 31, 32, 33.

[160] This form of pipe occurs over the whole pueblo area.

[161] Ancient cigarette reeds, found in sacrificial caves, have a small fragment of woven fabric tied about them.

[162] The so-called "implements of wood" figured by Nordenskiöld ("The Cliff Dwellers of the Mesa Verde," plate xlii) are identical with some of the pahos from Sikyatki, and are undoubtedly prayer-sticks.

[163] Primitive Culture, vol. ii, p. 396.

[164] Journal of American Ethnology and Archæology, Vol. ii, p. 131.

[165] American Anthropologist, July, 1892.