CULIN | RING AND PIN: HURON 549 
Esximo (Ita). Karma, Inglefield gulf, Greenland. (Cat. no. 
18609, Free Museum of Science and Art, University of 
Pennsylvania. ) 
Implements consisting of the ulna of a seal (figure 726), 45 inches in 
length, perforated at both ends: and a pin, consisting of the 
radius of a hare, attached by a cord of sinew. Collected by Mr 
Theodore Le Boutellier. 
Fig. 726. Fig. 727 
Fic. 725. Bone game; Central Eskimo (Koksoagmiut), Fort Chimo, Labrador; cat. no. 9228, 
United States National Museum; from Turner. 
Pig. 726. Ajagaq; length of seal bone, 4} inches; Ita Eskimo, Inglefield gulf, Greenland; cat. no. 
18609, Free Museum of Science and Art, University of Pennsylvania. 
Fic. 727. Ajagaq; length, 6} inches; Ita Eskimo. Smith sound, Greenland; cat. no. .{, American 
Museum of Natural History. 
Smith sound, Greenland. (Cat. no. 8%, American Mu- 
seum of Natural History.) 
A bone 64 inches in length (figure 727), with a hole bored through 
each socket and a thin stick tied by a short string to the bone, 
the latter being thrown up to be caught in either hole with the 
stick. Figured and described by Dr A. L. Kroeber,¢ who gives 
the name of the implement as ajagaq and that of the catching 
stick as ajautang. 
IROQUOIAN STOCK 
Huron. Ontario. 
Father Louis Hennepin,” describing the games of children, says: 
They also make a ball of flags or corn leaves, which they throw in the air and 
eatch on the end of a pointed stick. 
* Bulletin of the American Museum of Natural History, v. 12, p. 296, New York, 1900. 
*A Description of Louisiana, p. 303, New York, 1880, 
