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- Flintknapper's Hide Palm
Cultural Period: Ancestral Puebloan Description: "Flintknappers' palm" - Double thick stitched hide used to protect the palm of the hand from injury when producing stone tools. Dimensions: Unknown. Collection: On display at Navajo National Monument (Catalog No. 626). - Worked Bone Tool
Cultural Period: Ancestral Puebloan Description: Tool made from animal bone; function unknown. Dimensions: Unknown. Collection: On display at Navajo National Monument (Catalog No. 1073). - Gambling Piece
Cultural Period: Ancestral Puebloan Description: Carved bone die or gambling piece bearing four carved grooves on one side. Dimensions: Unknown. Collection: On display at Navajo National Monument (Catalog No. 287). - Gaming Piece?
Cultural Period: Ancestral Puebloan Description: Possible bone gaming piece with seven lines engraved into one face. Dimensions: 2 cm long. Collection: On display at Navajo National Monument (Catalog No. 2814). - Bone Awls
Cultural Period: Ancestral Puebloan Description: Awls made from bird, jack rabbit, and deer bone, and collected during the 1934 stabilization and excavation project at Keet Seel. Dimensions: Unknown. Collection: On display at Navajo National Monument. - Bone Awl
Cultural Period: Ancestral Puebloan Description: One of many awls made from bird, jack rabbit, and deer bone, and collected during the 1934 stabilization and excavation project at Keet Seel. Dimensions: Unknown. Collection: On display at Navajo National Monument. - Bone Awl
Cultural Period: Ancestral Puebloan Description: One of many awls made from bird, jack rabbit, and deer bone, and collected during the 1934 stabilization and excavation project at Keet Seel. Dimensions: Unknown. Collection: On display at Navajo National Monument. - Bone Awl
Cultural Period: Ancestral Puebloan Description: One of many awls made from bird, jack rabbit, and deer bone, and collected during the 1934 stabilization and excavation project at Keet Seel. Dimensions: Unknown. Collection: On display at Navajo National Monument. - Bone Awl
Cultural Period: Ancestral Puebloan Description: One of many awls made from bird, jack rabbit, and deer bone, and collected during the 1934 stabilization and excavation project at Keet Seel. Dimensions: Unknown. Collection: On display at Navajo National Monument. - Bone Awl
Cultural Period: Ancestral Puebloan Description: One of many awls made from bird, jack rabbit, and deer bone, and collected during the 1934 stabilization and excavation project at Keet Seel. Dimensions: Unknown. Collection: On display at Navajo National Monument. - Bone Awl
Cultural Period: Ancestral Puebloan Description: One of many awls made from bird, jack rabbit, and deer bone, and collected during the 1934 stabilization and excavation project at Keet Seel. Dimensions: Unknown. Collection: On display at Navajo National Monument. - Bone Awl
Cultural Period: Ancestral Puebloan Description: One of many awls made from bird, jack rabbit, and deer bone, and collected during the 1934 stabilization and excavation project at Keet Seel. Dimensions: Unknown. Collection: On display at Navajo National Monument. - Bone Awl
Cultural Period: Ancestral Puebloan Description: One of many awls made from bird, jack rabbit, and deer bone collected during the 1934 stabilization and excavation project at Keet Seel. Dimensions: Unknown. Collection: On display at Navajo National Monument. - Hafted Axe
Cultural Period: Ancestral Puebloan Description: Fully-grooved stone axe hafted with a wooden loop handle, collected by Byron Cummings in 1909. The axe head is made of basalt. The bit and sides are polished, but the back of the head is rough - either pecked or used for pounding. The handle is looped around the lateral groove in the axe head, and smaller split twigs or vines hold the handle and axe head in place. Red pigment is still apparent on the loop around the axe head. Dimensions: 4 L x 3 1/4 W x 2 7/8 T (axe). Collection: On display at Navajo National Monument (Catalog No. 433). - Scarlet Macaw Feathers
Cultural Period: Ancestral Puebloan Description: Scarlet Macaw feathers bound together with yucca and cotton. Dimensions: 2 3/4 inch diameter (the opening in the center is just large enough to fit a lead pencil tip). Collection: On display at Navajo National Monument (Catalog No. 37).