Photograph depicts two donkeys, which Maude describes as patient burros, taken somewhere in the American Southwest, likely in Arizona. Maude has playfully captioned the image.
Photograph depicts A'ts'ina ("place of writing on the rock" in Zuni) in El Morro, New Mexico. The site is also referred to as the El Morro National Monument or Inscription Rock, and consists of a sandstone promonotory upon which travelers for several centuries have left inscriptions. The inscriptions shown in this photograph include names and dates from the mid 19th century, as well as an inscription in an unknown language.
Photograph depicts what Maude refers to as the view from the top of El Morro, New Mexico. He is likely referring to the El Morro National Monument, a great standstone promontory. The site is also known as A'ts'ina ("place of writing on the rock" in Zuni) or Inscription Rock because of inscriptions that travellers have left on the rocks for several centuries.
Photograph of what Maude has identified as an old Zuni shrine with a bundle of Pahos and prayer sticks in the foreground, and old Zuni mesa in the background.
Photograph of a Zuni (A:shiwi) man on what apperas to be a donkey that Maude has identified as returning from a hunging trip. The photograph was likely taken in Zuni Pueblo in New Mexico.