A Study Of Pueblo Architecture Tusayan And Cibola Eighth Annual

Chapter 11

Chapter 11223 wordsPublic domain

_title in body text reads "Traditional..."_ Small ruin near Horn House Moen-kopi Tâaaiyalana ruins Kin-tiel and Kinna-Zinde _titles in body text:_ Small ruin between Horn House and Bat House Moen-kopi ruins Tâaaiyalana Kin-tiel

Many phrases are hyphenated in the List of Illustrations but not in the captions themselves: chief-kiva, ground-plan, loom-post, roof-beams...

Whatever their motive, the Bears left Antelope Canyon _text reads "Cañyon"_ far off on the Múina (river) near Alavia (Santa Fé) _text reads "Sante Fé"_ The principal building is a long irregular row, similar to _text reads "similiar"_ All the Tusayan kivas are in the form of a parallelogram _text reads "paralellogram"_ the second level of the kiva floor, forming the dais before referred to The ledge, or dais, is free for the use of spectators _text reads "dias" both times, but is spelled "dais" on its first occurrence (earlier in text)_ these overhanging copings occur principally on the southern exposures _text reads "pricipally"_ particularly prevalent in Zuni _text reads "particulary"_ Chapters II and III _text reads "Chapter"_ usually carved from a single piece of wood _text reads "single / single" at line break_ somewhat similar in effect to the carving on the Spanish beams _text reads "similiar"_ the almost inaccessible summit of Tâaaiyalana mesa _text reads "Tâaiyalana"_

[Index] Stonework ... Oraibi _text reads "Oraib"_ Tâaaiyalana, relation of K'iakima to _text reads "Tâaiyalana"_

Punctuation:

Long ago the Hopi´tuh were few _paragraph (printed as block quote) begins with redundant quotation mark_