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A Tubular Stone Pipe (?) from Sonora

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  20 January 2017

Charles C. Di Peso*
Affiliation:
The Amerind Foundation, IncDragoon, Ariz.

Extract

In December of 1954, Mr. and Mrs. Ruben Emrick of Conrad, Montana, found a broken sandstone object in an arroyo cut located 30 miles north of the town of Empalme near Ortiz in Sonora, Mexico (Fig. 1). They very graciously brought the artifact to the Amerind Museum for examination where it was repaired and studied. The object resembled the tubular stone pipes found in the Southwest (Figs. 2, 3). It had the exterior and inner proportions so characteristic of these pipes, which were produced by drilling out the pipe interior until it resembled a modern venturi tube having a constricted throat.

Type
Facts and Comments
Copyright
Copyright © The Society for American Archaeology 1957

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References

Di Peso, C. C. 1956 The Upper Pima of San Cayetano del Tumacacori. Amerind Foundation, No. 7. Dragoon. (In press.)Google Scholar
Fewkes, J. W. 1892 A Few Summer Ceremonials at the Tusayan Pueblos. Journal of American Ethnology and Archaeology, Vol. 2. Cambridge.Google Scholar
Haury, E. W. 1950 The Stratigraphy and Archaeology of Ventana Cave Arizona. University of Arizona Press and University of New Mexico Press, Tucson and Albuquerque.Google Scholar