7KHÀUVWGROODQLQIDQWUHFHLYHVLVD ÁDWGROODputsqu-tihu. All infant girls receive this doll and in some villages infant boys do as well. Through the years the girls will continue to receive dolls during the katsina ceremonies. Boys are presented with bows and DUURZVOLJKWQLQJVWLFNVUDWWOHVDQG such. Katsina dolls are popular tourist souvenirs carved from the waterseeking cottonwood tree root. There are over four-hundred katsina dolls and usually have no moving parts. Zuni katsina dolls are distinguished E\KDYLQJPRYDEOHOLPEVWLQ\IHHW and are dressed in miniature clothing. There are fewer Zuni dolls produced and rarely made available to someone outside the Zuni people. The first doll that all infant girls receive is the 6-inch flat doll of the "Grandmother" katsina. This doll was carved by Gerald Dashee from the First Mesa for the tourist trade. ca.1990s A katsina doll carved in the shape of an ear of corn, is of "Kokole," the storyteller and was given to a girl from First Mesa. ca. 1970 Some typical gifts for boys from a Hopi katsina ceremony are a bow and arrow set and a lightning stick 16-inches and 15-inches respectively. The lightning stick is used in dances to bring lightning and rain to the pueblo. ca. 1970 66 SPRING 2018 A flat katsina doll in a cradleboard is very unusual to find. ca. 1950s