rated in underglaze blue, rough chevron ornament 

 below the rim cm the interior. Diameter approxi- 

 mate!) 5 in. T.N. 23. 



8. Lower bow] fragment ol lead-glass Romer orna- 

 mented with gadrooning or pillar molding. This 

 is undoubtedly the finest glass fragment from the 

 site: it would not have been out of place in the best 

 English household. 124 About 1685. T.N. 30. 



1 Indian projectile point of honey-colored quartzite. 

 The edges slightly serated, and the base slightly 



i2< Sec Hughes, English, Scottish and Irish Table Glass, p. 195 

 and fig. 134. 



concave; the tip missing, but total length originally 

 about 43 mm. Holland Type C. 125 T.N. 16. 

 10. Indian projectile point of red quartzite. Eared 

 or corner-notched variety; original length approxi- 

 mately 45 mm. Holland Type O. 126 This is an 

 unstratified item discovered on the bared clay sur- 

 face on the promontory of Tutter's Neck overlooking 

 the junction of Tutter's Neck and Kingsmill Greeks. 



125 C. G. Holland, "An Analysis of Projectile Points and 

 Large Blades," appendix to Clifford Evans, A Ceramic Study 

 oj Virginia Archeology (Bureau of American Ethnology Bulletin 

 160, Washington, 1955), p. 167. 



'28 Ibid., p. 171. 



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