BASKETRY AND TEXTILES
The perishable materials from which baskets, mats,
cloth and cord were made at Tuzigoot were
found in many instances surprisingly well preserved, but always in very
fragmentary form. No whole basket, no complete mat, no great length of
cord, and no considerable piece of cloth came to light. Our record of
weaving, which must have been one of the principal and best developed
arts at Tuzigoot, are based on the most minute remnants of charred or
otherwise preserved portions of yucca, rush grass, cotton and human
hair.
COILED BASKETRY. Coiled baskets must have
been numerous at Tuzigoot. Tiny fragments of three were found with three
different burials. But most of our knowledge of the coiled baskets comes
from single room, Room 6, Group I, which was serving as a storage room
at the time of the abandonment of the pueblo, and which had burned. When
the burning roof collapsed, it fell on seven large coiled baskets.
Fragments of these were fortunately preserved in the form of charcoal. A
similar happening resulted in the presevation of fragments of two or
three more coiled baskets in a nearby storage room.
The charred basket fragments from Room 6 utilized
most often two twigs as the foundation of the coil, but occasionally a
smaller twig was inserted between the two principal twigs of the
foundation. Grass or bark was not utilized in the bundle surrounding
the foundation: split twigs fulfilled this function. The bundles were
sewed together with wood splints which ran about ten to the inch. The
average diameter of a coil was a little more than 1/8 inch. The coils
were usually round, but sometimes the horizontal diameter was a little
greater than the vertical.
A charred fragment of a coiled basket was found in
the burned roof material from the early Room 5, Group II. It differed
from the Room 6 and other specimens in that, although the bundle had a
two rod foundation it was composed of very small unsplit twigs and a
little grass instead of split twigs. The splints also were wider and ran
about seven to the inch.
PAINTED COILED BASKET. At the feet of a
burial was found the remains of a coiled basket which had been
elaborately painted with mineral pigments. The basket itself had
disintegrated almost entirely, but the paint was preserved and
maintained the outlines of the basket. It had been about 8 inches in
diameter and was shallow and platter-like, perhaps not over 2
inches deep. The interior had been painted over the whole surface with a
thick green paint. The exterior had been painted blue and then a second
coat of green applied over this. A design had been painted only on the
exterior. The design was applied in red, outlines in yellow, and
consisted of a circle of solid red, about 2 inches in diameter at the
bottom of the basket, from which radiated angular meanders of thin lines
of red bordered by yellow over the whole exterior surface.
COARSE COILED BASKETRY. A number of fragments
charred and otherwise, of coarse coiled baskets, somewhat similar to
modern Pima storage baskets, were found in several rooms. A number of
these were found surrounding large ollas, as though they might have
served as slings used in swinging ollas from the rafters of a room or
from the shoulder in carrying. Ordinarily the bundles of the coils
consisted of coarse grass stems and some kind of rush leaves, perhaps
cat-tail. They were sewed together by means of bear grass or narrow leaf
yucca. The coils were about an inch wide and half an inch thick. Some
fragments were found in which the coils contained much juniper bark.
GRASS MATTING. Very similar in weave, but of course not coiled,
to the coarse coiled baskets were grass mats which in some cases had
served as roof material between the small pole and the adobe layers and
in other cases had been probably sleeping mats. The bundles consisted of
coarse grass and were woven together with widely spaced rushes or narrow
leaf yucca.
RUSH MATTING. Plate XVIII. shows samples of
twilled weave rush matting. It was made of both bear grass and a type of
broad leaf grass or rush. Almost all the specimens recovered were of
over three and under three weave. A few specimens were over two and
under two. The matting was used as floor covering and as burial
wrapping and was very abundant at Tuzigoot.
A small piece of belt or carrying strap of twilled
weave was found in a room.
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Plate XVIII. A (left). Top. Pipestone that was worked down into rather
thin pieces, apparently blanks from beads. Bottom. Pipestone pendants.
B (right). Top. Fragment of yucca netting. Bottom. Twilled weave
matting.
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NET-CLOTH OF YUCCA. Adhering to a portion of
a twilled burial mat was an unusual example of woven material. The
fragment recovered is illustrated in Plate XVIII. It was loosely woven,
resulting in a mosquito-bar effect. The weft strands were double,
untwisted, with about 1/16 of an inch intervals between pairs. The warps
were single strands about 3/16 of an inch apart. The material of the
strands was a strong fibrous material, perhaps yucca.
YUCCA CORD NET. Found inside a large olla in
Room 6, Group I, were the charred remains of a large net made of yucca
cord. The net was composed of two-strand twisted yucca cord about 1/16
of an inch in diameter, knotted after the manner of modern hammock
netting with square knots and occasional grannies. The small cord of the
netting had been fastened to a 1/4 of an inch tightly twisted,
three-strand yucca cord.
HUMAN HAIR CORD. A small piece of braided
cord which appears to have been made of human hair was found.
OLLA RESTS. Olla rests made of a circle of
small twigs wrapped together with rushes of some variety and filled in the
center with grass, leaves, and juniper bark were found beneath ollas in
Room 31a, Group V. The rests were about 16 inches in diameter and from
two to three inches thick.
TWINED BASKET. The only example of a twined
basket is represented by a few small charred fragments. The rod warps
consisted of twigs about 1/4 of an inch in diameter. They were twined
together with both yucca and cotton cords. The cotton cords were two or
three strand. The rods were inserted between the strands of the cord in
some cases; in other cases an ordinary twined weave of wefts over and
under the rod warps was carried out. The rod warps were about
1/2 an inch apart.
COTTON CLOTH. One minute fragment of cotton
cloth was found with a burial on the east slope. It was lost before a
thorough examination of it could be made.
Impressions of cotton cloth were found on the interior
of an olla, which must have been made when the clay of the vessel
was still soft. The impressions reveal a moderately coarse burlap-like
cloth of ordinary twined weave with warps and wefts of about equal
diameter.
Similar impressions were found on two small masses
of a yellow organic substance. The impressions indicated that the cloth
had been in the form of a small bag of which the mouth had been drawn
together tightly by some means.
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