I 36 FLORIDA GEOLOGICAL SURVEY-EIGHTH ANNUAL REPORT. 
Upon sifting" the sand in which these bones were imbedded there 
was obtained in addition two phalanges, a section from a limb 
bone and some other human bone fragments. 
about 458 to 468 feet west of the bridge. Scale vertical and horizontal, 1 inch 
equals 2feet. 1, 2 and 3 represent strata 1, 2 and 3 of the general section. 
Human bones are found in stratum 2 at a and at b. T he scapula of a deer 
was found at c. The overlying material consists of alternating layers of sand 
and muck which had not been disturbed. These conform to the irregularities 
of the underlying formation. For a photograph of this section see plate 16. 
The dividing line between strata 2 and 3 of the general section 
here as elsewhere is well marked and unmistakable and the human 
bones lay in stratum No. 2. The overlying laminated deposit is 
undisturbed and hence the bones cannot represent a recent burial. 
The vertebrates associated with these bones are listed in a subse¬ 
quent paragraph. 
DISCOVERY OF THE FLINTS IN STRATUM NO. 2. 
Text-figures 7-11. 
In stratum No. 2 at the locality on the south bank, 460 feet 
west of the bridge, Frank Ayers found in place a thin sharp-edged 
flint which undoubtedly is a spawl from the manufacture of some 
kind of a flint implement. The place of this flint in the bed is 
about a foot farther in the bank than the human bones and three 
or four feet farther east. This flint is illustrated in the accom- 
