North-American Indian. (D.c.) 



[86.] Pipe; bowl, catlinite, loin. long; a buffalo 

 cow before, and a calf behind the bowl; weighs 2lb. 150Z. ; 

 stem, 2 gin. long x 2 fin. and 2^in. wide ; painted with 

 black bands. (Pawnee.) 



[ 87.] Pipe ; bowl, catlinite, inlaid with white metal, 

 yin. long; stem, wood, 34in. longx2^in. and 2in. wide; 

 i6in. of stem perforated. 



[ 88.] Pipe ; bowl, dark stone, inlaid with white metal 

 and catlinite, 6in. long; stem, 3oin. long, 2in. wide, of plain 

 wood. Chippewa. (Pembina, Minnesota.) 



[89.] Pipe; bowl, catlinite, 4iin. long; flat wooden 

 stem, 32in. long x 2^in. and i^,in. broad; perforations gin. 

 long ; covered with dyed porcupine quill, plaited. (Sioux.) 



[90.] Pipe; an unusually large bowl, catlinite, iO'|in. 

 long X sfin. high, plain; stem, wood, 27]in. long x ijin. wide; 

 gin. of stem carved in a spiral. 



[91.] Pipe; bowl, catlinite, S^in. long, plain; stem, 

 wood, cylindrical ; incised with spiral lines. 



[92, 93, and 94.] Pipe Stems, wood, cylindrical. 

 2oin., i7in., i4Ain. long. 



[95.] Pipe Stem, wood, i2in. long; with tuft of 

 feathers. 



[ 96 and 97.] Pipe Stems, wood, 8f in. x 5iin. long; 

 ornamented with dyed bark. 



NORTH-AMERICAN INDIANS OF NORTH 

 PACIFIC COAST. (D.e.) 



The following nineteen Pipes are in hlaek days/one, or slate, 

 and arc elaborately carved ivith the most singular and 

 grotesque devices ; human and animal forms being grouped 

 and involved in extraordinary modes. The Pipes from 

 No. I to No. ig are entirely free from the influence of 

 Europeafi civilization, which has modified the character of 

 those following : — 



[ I.] Pipe. S^in. long, sin. deep, lin. thick. 

 [ 2.] Pipe. io|in. long, 2in. deep, |in. thick. 

 [3.] Pipe. i3in. long, 3{in. deep, iin. thick. 

 [4.] Pipe. 4in. long, 2|in. deep, liin. thick. 

 [161J V 



