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Title | Collection Number And Name | Photo Number |
1 |
 | Figure 06: The Deep Creek Mountains | P1763 A Study of the Gosiute Indians of Utah | |
2 |
 | Figure 39: The completed cradle board | P1763 A Study of the Gosiute Indians of Utah | |
3 |
 | Figure 25: Exterior view of a Gosiute House | P1763 A Study of the Gosiute Indians of Utah | |
4 |
 | Figure 12: Outcropping in the Simpson Mountains on which petroglyphs may be found | P1763 A Study of the Gosiute Indians of Utah | |
5 |
 | Figure 13: Petroglyph in the Simpson Mountains | P1763 A Study of the Gosiute Indians of Utah | |
6 |
 | Figure 16: Archaeological sites along the east bank of Fifteen-Mile Creek near the Goshute {sic} Reservation Agency Headquarters | P1763 A Study of the Gosiute Indians of Utah | |
7 |
 | Figure 20: Photograph of the type of fence used by the Gosiute in the building of an antelope corral | P1763 A Study of the Gosiute Indians of Utah | |
8 |
 | Figure 21: Meat drying on a line hung between two shade trees. Photograph from Deep Creek | P1763 A Study of the Gosiute Indians of Utah | |
9 |
 | Figure 26: Interior view of a Gosiute house showing roof construction | P1763 A Study of the Gosiute Indians of Utah | |
10 |
 | Figure 31: Scraping willows in preparation for weaving | P1763 A Study of the Gosiute Indians of Utah | |
11 |
 | Figure 34: Carrying basket with canvas bottom | P1763 A Study of the Gosiute Indians of Utah | |
12 |
 | Figure 35: Berry Basket, Deep Creek Gosiute | P1763 A Study of the Gosiute Indians of Utah | |
13 |
 | Figure 37: Coiled water jug made by a Deep Creek Gosiute. "Go go south in" | P1763 A Study of the Gosiute Indians of Utah | |
14 |
 | Figure 57: Coiled water jug made by a Deep Creek Gosiute "go go south in" | P1763 A Study of the Gosiute Indians of Utah | |
15 |
 | Figure 15: Pictographs in Tunnel Canyon | P1763 A Study of the Gosiute Indians of Utah | |
16 |
 | Figure 18: The western limit of the Gosiute, the east slope of the Steptoe Mountains in Nevada. View south toward Spring Valley | P1763 A Study of the Gosiute Indians of Utah | |
17 |
 | Figure 24: Distant view of a Gosiute house showing a conical "Little House" to the right. A cellar is located on the opposite side | P1763 A Study of the Gosiute Indians of Utah | |
18 |
 | Figure 56: Anees Tommy, one of the Gosiute chiefs | P1763 A Study of the Gosiute Indians of Utah | |
19 |
 | Figure 58: Scene in front of the Goshute Day School | P1763 A Study of the Gosiute Indians of Utah | |
20 |
 | 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 | P1763 A Study of the Gosiute Indians of Utah | |
21 |
 | Figure 02: Knolls, Utah. View southwest. This locality is on the eastern edge of the Great Salt Lake Desert | P1763 A Study of the Gosiute Indians of Utah | |
22 |
 | Figure 03: The Bonneville Salt Flats on the Great Salt Lake Desert, Utah. Captain Cobb's world speed record car in the distance | P1763 A Study of the Gosiute Indians of Utah | |
23 |
 | 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 | P1763 A Study of the Gosiute Indians of Utah | |
24 |
 | Figure 08a: Some modern means of subsistence: weaving a cradle board for sale | P1763 A Study of the Gosiute Indians of Utah | |
25 |
 | Figure 14: Recess in Tunnel Canyon, Nevada, in which Pictographs occur | P1763 A Study of the Gosiute Indians of Utah | |