HARPOON-HEADS. 



Mr. Friedel figures a lacustrine object of almost the same shape, which ho 

 designates correctly, I think as a harpoon-head. To its shank still adheres 

 the bituminous substance by which it was fastened into a shaft.* Fig. 68 repre- 



FIGS. 56-58. Deer-horn harpoon-heads. Saint- Aubin. 



sents a fine deer-horn harpoon-head of kindred character from Saint-Aubin, 

 which is preserved in the Peabody Museum (No. 5232. C). A smaller one, four 

 and one-fourth inches in length, derived from the same locality, and likewise in 



*Amtliche Berichte; p. 130, Fig. 97. 



