146 



STONE ART. 



[eth. akn. 13 



b 



My.: 



■S4m 



ink 

 mi - 



-s- 



m-l\ 





~^p(ic 



than the other. The type ilhistrated in figure 182 is from Vernon county, 

 Wisconsin. Other specimens are from western and 

 central Wisconsin; eastern Tennessee; Miami and 

 Scioto valleys, and central Ohio; southwestern Illi- 

 nois; Kanawha valley; 

 northeastern Kentucky; 

 northeastern and south- 

 western Arkansas; 

 northwestern and north- 

 eastern Georgia, and Sa- 

 vannah. 

 FIG. i83.-chipped fimt. 0. With convex edges 

 and slightly convex base; being a medium 

 between the triangular and the leaf-shape. 

 Some are quite narrow and thick, others 

 wide and thin; the former 

 probably clubs or sjiear- 

 heads, the latter knives. A 

 good example, shown in fig- 

 ure 18.3, is from Savaunah, y-' 

 Georgia. Others are from 

 central Arkansas; central 

 Ohio; eastern Tennessee; 

 Kauawha valley; central 

 !North Carolina; southern 

 Wisconsin; northwestern 

 Georgia, and Savannah; 

 northeastern Alabama; and 

 I ' ' , ,;.:| South Carolina. 



1 H. Pointed at each end; 



./ mostly elliptical, though 



- 1 sometimes widest near one 



' end; from 5 to 12 inches 



long. Nearly all are thin 



and finely worked, with 



sharp edges. One from 



, /-,, .1 ... m „ f IG. 184.— Chipited fliDt. large, pointed 



' Cheatham county, Tennes- eii.i-iicai cmuine 



see, has a deep notch on each edge about one-third of 

 , •^. the way from one end, this end being somewhat rounded. 



Fig. i85^biDped The type (figure 184) is from Lonoke county, Arkansas. 

 sharp pomt.^""* Other Specimens are from central Arkansas, southwest- 

 ern Illinois, northern and eastern Tennessee. 

 I. A similar pattern, but having one end continued into a narrow 

 point, shown in figure 18.5, is from Bartow county, Georgia. Another 

 of the same kind comes from Loudon county, Tennessee. 



J. Similar to group //, but with the edges straight for more than half 

 the length, probably to aft'ord a more convenient hold for the hand. 



I 



