MYER] THE FEWKES GROUP 575 
Oxssects Founp 1x Mounp No. 2 
Among other things found scattered through the soil of mound 
No. 2 were the artifacts shown in Plate 129. The barbed arrow 
point, b, was made from the tip of an antler. It has a projecting 
barb which would hold the point within a wound when the shaft 
was withdrawn. 
The bone awl, c, shown in Plate 129, was made from the ulna of a 
Virginia deer; the whetstone, d, is of fine-grained red sandstone; 
and the bone ‘awl, e, is from the tibia of a deer. 
Especial attention is called to the unnotched triangular arrow 
point, 7, shown in Plate 129. 
One or two arrow heads are not enough upon which to build con+ 
jectures; but it is proper to note that a few archeologists think it 
probable that the majority of arrow heads of this type belonged to 
lroquoian people. 
Fic. 165.—Restoration of pot No. 1 from mound No. 2 
Only two flint arrowheads were found in mound No. 2. The other 
one, in Plate 129, g,.is of the stone drill type. This drill type was 
used by nearly all the tribes. 
The fact that only two flint arrow points were found in this im- 
portant mound, which was occupied for such a long period of time, 
shows how careful and frugal were the ancient dwellers thereon. In 
all that time they let only these two become lost in the spaces exca- 
vated. 
A disk, 214 inches in diameter, made from a fragment of pottery, 
is shown in Plate 129,4. It may have been the stone cover of a 
very small pot. A small pot with a similar stone cover, about 3 
inches in diameter, was found on the Gordon site. 
ReEsTORATIONS OF PoTTERY VESSELS 
Every fragment of pottery found in mound No. 2 was saved. A 
careful ‘study of these fragments has enabled us to make fairly 
accurate restorations of a large number of vessels for domestic use, 
belonging to the people who raised this mound. Typical examples 
of these are shown in Figures 165 to 189, inclusive. Not all the 
