182 CERTAIN ABORIGINAL REMAINS, BLACK WARRIOR RIVER. 
Vessel No. 11.—This vessel, a wide-mouthed water-bottle (Fig. 71), with incised 
scroll design surrounding depressions, had been placed beside the skull of an ex- 
tended skeleton. Beneath this vessel, but not in contact with it, was a fragment of 
a pot. 
Vessel No. 12.—An interesting 
water-bottle, with handles, as shown 
in Fig. 72. Near this vessel was a 
large fragment of pottery. 
Vessels Nos. 13 and 14.—Ves- 
sel No. 13, a small bowl with incised 
decoration of the ribbon-fold pattern 
(Fig. 73), and Vessel No. 14 (Fig. 
14) а wide-mouthed water-bottle 
with four incised designs, all similar 
(two of which are shown), lay near 
the remains of the skull of an infant 
or of an older child, from which the 
remainder of the skeleton, in all 
probability, had erumbled away. 
Vessels Nos. 15 and 16.—Ves- 
sel No. 15, a small, undecorated n Ho RR Т Шы, se ania 
bowl, and Vessel No. 16, a broad- 
mouthed water-bottle bearing a decoration consisting of the characteristic depres- 
sions surrounded by incised scrolls, lay together beside the skull of a skeleton at 
full length. 
Vessel No. 17.—A bowl badly broken, but since put together (Fig. 75), having 
as decoration incised scrolls partly interlocked, lay by the shoulder of an extended 
skeleton. 
Vessel No. 18.—This vessel, found in fragments just below the surface, has 
upright bands with cross-hatch decoration. 
Vessel No. 19.—Into a pit, probably roughly circular, 4 feet deep and 3 feet 
in diameter, another pit had been dug. This second pit, 28 inches deep and 50 
inches in diameter, extended 6 inches beyond the margin of the lower pit on one 
side. At the bottom of the upper pit was a skull, several cervical vertebra, and one 
clavicle. With the clavicle were decaying fragments of a sheet-copper ornament 
and certain shell beads. Considerably above these bones was a bunch of parallel 
long-bones made up of what remained of two humeri, two femurs, two tibiz, one 
patella, and one ulna. Near the skull of the lower deposit was a small, broad- 
mouthed water-bottle (Vessel No. 192), having two holes for suspension. 
Vessel No. 20.— Part of a vessel of eccentric shape, having a portion of the 
rim much lower than the remainder which has been scalloped. Тһе base is flat 
(Fig. 76). This vessel belongs to an unfamiliar type of which more will be said in 
connection with Vessel No. 37, Mound O. 
