PREHISTORIC ART. 335 



Facing page. 

 39,40. Series of polished, wrought, and salved stoue objects of .semiprecious 

 character, principally jadeite, from Central America. < )bverse and reverse 

 views of same objects. (U. S. National Museum) 457 



41. Series of objects of polished stone, princii)ally jadeite and o^bsidian, from 



Mexico and Central America. (U. S. National Museum) 461 



42. Patn-patu from the Pacific coast of the United States, similar to those from 



New Zealand, Cat. Nos. 1300, 172565, U.S.N. M 465 



43. Four statues, sandstone, rudely representing the human figure, found in 1890, 



Aveyron, France. Cartailhac, I'Anthropologie, 1892, III, No. 2, page 222; 

 G. de Mortillet, Revue Mensuelle de I'Ecole d' Anthropologic, No. 10, 

 October 15, 1893, page 316 468 



44. Human figure, stone, 21+ inches high, 56 pounds. Found in 1888 near Stiles- 



boro, Bartow County, Georgia 469 



45. Stone .statue, front and side views. P'towah mounds, Bartow County, Geor- 



gia. Original in Tennessee Historical Society collection. Cast, Cat. No. 

 612,57, U.S.N.M 471 



46. Three stoue statues. Kentucky. Originals in Louisville Public Library. 



Casts, Cat. Nos. 30251-52. 612.59, U.S.N.M 472 



47. Statue of gray sandstone, height 13 inches. Williamson County, Tennessee. 



In Tennessee Historical Society collection. Thruston, Antiijuities of Ten- 

 nessee, page 104 474 



48. Two head-shaped vases. Pecan Point, Arkansas. (1) Cat. No. 94398; (2) Cast, 



Cat. No. 94398rt. Holmes, Fourth Ann. Rept. Bur. Ethnol., 1882-83, pages 

 407-409, figs. 420-423 475 



49. Two head-shaped vases, one a death mask, the other not. (U, S, National 



Museum) 475 



50,51. (Two plates.) A series of 18 etitigy bottles from stone graves, Tennessee, 

 repre.senting the human face. General Thruston's collection, Nashville, 

 Tennessee. One-third natural size 480 



52. Two rude sculptured heads in stone. The smaller one from Monmouth, New 



Jersey (American Naturalist, page 70, 1889), Cat. No. 61474, U.S.N.M. ; the 

 larger one from Sonthfield, Staten Island, Cat. No. 98133, U.S.N.M 481 



53. Roman (?) situla in bronze representing human head, believed to be of a 



North American Indian. Louvre Museum. A. de Ceuleneer, Antiquites du 

 Louvre, 1890 482 



54. Two crouching lions, sculptured from solid rock. Pueblo region. New 



Mexico. Reproduced from painting of E. W. Deming, artist 485 



55. Pottery vases of tulip, form, the standard of Dolmen ^lottery. St. Vallier 



(Alpes-Maritimes), France, Collected by M. C. Bottin 494 



56. Art forms of various pottery vases in European countries 494 



Explanation of Plate 56. 



Fig. 1. From Morbihan, France. 



2. From Vienne, France. 



3. From Morbihan, France. 



4. From Northumberland, England. 



5. From Seine-et-Marne, France. 



6. From Terramara of Mercurago, Italy. 



7. From Denmark. 



8. Prom Paris. 



9. From Morbilian, France. 



10. From ilonshcim, near Worm.^, Germany. 



11. From Denmark. 



J2. From Robenhausen, Switzerland. 



