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Hunters.jpg Man with curved stickThumbnailsGrasshopperMan with curved stickThumbnailsGrasshopperMan with curved stickThumbnailsGrasshopperMan with curved stickThumbnailsGrasshopperMan with curved stickThumbnailsGrasshopperMan with curved stickThumbnailsGrasshopperMan with curved stickThumbnailsGrasshopper
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Hunters. Oldtown Ruin. (Osborn collection.)

An instructive group of human figures is drawn on a deep red and white food bowl, which measures ten inches in diameter. It is evident that this design represents three hunters following the trail of a horned animal, probably a deer. This trail is represented on the surface of the bowl by a row of triangles, while the footprints of the hunters extend along its side. It may be noted that although there are three hunters, the trails of two only are represented, and that the hunters are barefoot. They have perhaps lost the trail and25 are looking the opposite way, while the animal has turned back on his path. The footprints of the deer in advance of the hunters are tortuous, showing want of decision on the part of the animal. The three hunters are dressed alike, wearing the close-fitting jacket probably made of strips of skin woven together like that found by Dr. Hough in a sacrificial cave at the head of the Tulerosa, New Mexico.

Author
Archeology of the lower Mimbres valley, New Mexico
By Jesse Walter Fewkes
Published in 1914
Available from gutenberg.org
Dimensions
935*930
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