File contains graphic materials depicting petroglyphs and pictographs in the coast of British Columbia. According to annotations, some of the photographs were taken by Dick Pattinson, C. Gades, and Dr. Foskett.
Item is a close-up image of a petroglyph pecked on a rock. According to annotation, petroglyph is a circle pecked on granite, but not the same circle as the one in black and white, image was taken by E. F. Meade. Original slide included the numbers 3545 and other handwritten annotations reading "circle with [??????]?."
Item is a close-up image of a petroglyph pecked on a rock. According to annotations, image was taken by E. F. Meade. Original slide included number 3545.
Item is a close-up image of a petroglyph pecked on a rock with smaller rocks on the side, probably on a beach. According to annotations, image was taken by Dick Pattinson from Alert Bay. Original slide included number 3546
Item is a close-up image of a petroglyph pecked on a sandstone rock with smaller rocks on the side, probably in a beach area. According to annotations, image was taken by E. F. Meade. Original slide included number 29.
Item is a close-up image of a petroglyph pecked on a sandstone rock with smaller rocks on the side, probably in a beach area. According to annotations, image was taken by E. F. Meade. Original slide included numbers 93 and 17.
Item is a close-up image of a petroglyph pecked on a rock . According to annotations, image was taken by Dick Pattinson. Original slide included numbers 10 and LC3001.
Copied [ca. 197-?] (originally created 1897 - 1930)
The collection consists of slides, photographs and negatives, all copies of Curtis’ most extensive work, “The North American Indian.” The collection is divided into two series: slides and photographs.
Photograph depicts a stone wall that Maude has identified as the remains of ancient pueblo on 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 upright stones used in certain A:shiwi (Zuni) ceremonies. In the same inscription, Maude writes that the photograph also shows an man throwing sacred corn meal to the north.