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Title | Date | Type |
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Figure 01: Skull Valley, view from the northwest at, or near Timpie Junction. Jedediah Smith in 1827 climed {sic} the knob in the distance and obtained a glimpse of the Great Salt Lake | 1939 | Image/StillImage |
2 |
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Figure 02: Knolls, Utah. View southwest. This locality is on the eastern edge of the Great Salt Lake Desert | 1939 | Image/StillImage |
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Figure 03: The Bonneville Salt Flats on the Great Salt Lake Desert, Utah. Captain Cobb's world speed record car in the distance | 1939 | Image/StillImage |
4 |
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Figure 04: Sage Brush in a favorable living locality just south of Skull Valley. This brush is as much as fourteen feet high, indicating a rich soil and a considerable amount of moisture | 1939 | Image/StillImage |
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Figure 05: Deep Creek Valley from the Deep Creek Mountains. The Tippets Mountains appear twenty miles westward. The Gosiute village is the center of the picture | 1939 | Image/StillImage |
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Figure 06: The Deep Creek Mountains | 1939 | Image/StillImage |
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Figure 08a: Some modern means of subsistence: weaving a cradle board for sale | 1939 | Image/StillImage |
8 |
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Figure 08b: Some modern means of subsistence: Weaving a basket preparatory to the pine nut gathering season | 1939 | Image/StillImage |
9 |
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Figure 12: Outcropping in the Simpson Mountains on which petroglyphs may be found | 1939 | Image/StillImage |
10 |
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Figure 13: Petroglyph in the Simpson Mountains | 1939 | Image/StillImage |
11 |
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Figure 14: Recess in Tunnel Canyon, Nevada, in which Pictographs occur | 1939 | Image/StillImage |
12 |
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Figure 15: Pictographs in Tunnel Canyon | 1939 | Image/StillImage |
13 |
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Figure 16: Archaeological sites along the east bank of Fifteen-Mile Creek near the Goshute {sic} Reservation Agency Headquarters | 1939 | Image/StillImage |
14 |
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Figure 17: Locality of archaeological sites on the west bank of Fifteen-Mile Creek opposite the Gosiute Village. View north | 1939 | Image/StillImage |
15 |
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Figure 18: The western limit of the Gosiute, the east slope of the Steptoe Mountains in Nevada. View south toward Spring Valley | 1939 | Image/StillImage |
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Figure 20: Photograph of the type of fence used by the Gosiute in the building of an antelope corral | 1939 | Image/StillImage |
17 |
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Figure 21: Meat drying on a line hung between two shade trees. Photograph from Deep Creek | 1939 | Image/StillImage |
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Figure 22: Some modern means of subsistence: c. growing alfalfa and other products for Gosiute consumption | 1939 | Image/StillImage |
19 |
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Figure 23: Framework of a Deep Creek "Little House" with a piece of Canvas Still Attached After it was Abandoned. The Tent in the Background was used as the Family Dwelling | 1939 | Image/StillImage |
20 |
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Figure 24: Distant view of a Gosiute house showing a conical "Little House" to the right. A cellar is located on the opposite side | 1939 | Image/StillImage |
21 |
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Figure 25: Exterior view of a Gosiute House | 1939 | Image/StillImage |
22 |
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Figure 26: Interior view of a Gosiute house showing roof construction | 1939 | Image/StillImage |
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Figure 27: View of the finest house constructed at Deep Creek by an Indian. It was abandoned at the death of several of the members of the family. The door on this house faced south, even though its inhabitants were peyote members | 1939 | Image/StillImage |
24 |
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Figure 28: Rear view of the same house as above. The small house to the right was occupied by Commodore, 96 year old Gosiute. A quantity of tools, harness, etc, were left inside. View southeast | 1939 | Image/StillImage |
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Figure 29: After the houses shown on the previous pages were abandoned the family moved into this structure. The roof, now gone, was made of canvas. The secondary structure may be observed adjoining | 1939 | Image/StillImage |
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Figure 30: Sometimes after a house is abandoned it is burned. This view shows the trees, cellars, and corral where a house was burned at the death of a member of the family | 1939 | Image/StillImage |
27 |
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Figure 31: Scraping willows in preparation for weaving | 1939 | Image/StillImage |
28 |
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Figure 32: Coiled Basket with bead design woven into it. Made by a Deep Creek Gosiute, 1939 | 1939 | Image/StillImage |
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Figure 33: Winnowing Basket, Deep Creek Gosiute | 1939 | Image/StillImage |
30 |
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Figure 34: Carrying basket with canvas bottom | 1939 | Image/StillImage |
31 |
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Figure 35: Berry Basket, Deep Creek Gosiute | 1939 | Image/StillImage |
32 |
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Figure 36: Water jug with human hair handle, cedar bark stopper, and pitch smeared on the outside to stop leaks | 1939 | Image/StillImage |
33 |
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Figure 37: Coiled water jug made by a Deep Creek Gosiute. "Go go south in" | 1939 | Image/StillImage |
34 |
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Figure 38: Weaving a cradle board. A completed one, used by the small boy in the picture, stands against the wall | 1939 | Image/StillImage |
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Figure 39: The completed cradle board | 1939 | Image/StillImage |
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Figure 41: Photograph of the remains of a Gosiute birth enclosure located about one block east of the Deep Creek Agency and School. It is approximately fifteen feet square and opens toward the west. A fire hearth was placed in its center and consisted of three logs, one small, and two large | 1939 | Image/StillImage |
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Figure 42: Burial No.1, Deep Creek | 1939 | Image/StillImage |
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Figure 43: Burial No. 1, Deep Creek | 1939 | Image/StillImage |
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Figure 44a: Cemetery at Deep Creek | 1939 | Image/StillImage |
40 |
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Figure 54: Peyote moon altar made in December 1939. AJ claimed this one was the largest ever made at Deep Creek and measured six feet from tip to tip | 1939 | Image/StillImage |
41 |
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Figure 55: Bear Dance Circle used in 1938. View west | 1939 | Image/StillImage |
42 |
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Figure 56: Anees Tommy, one of the Gosiute chiefs | 1939 | Image/StillImage |
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Figure 57: Coiled water jug made by a Deep Creek Gosiute "go go south in" | 1939 | Image/StillImage |
44 |
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Figure 58: Scene in front of the Goshute Day School | 1939 | Image/StillImage |