MOUNDVILLE REVISITED. 3 
oe 
1 
б This pipe deserves а place to itself апа I congratulate you as to its possession. 
us The pipes of what I have called the bi-conical type are in my paper" (pages 
5538-59, ete.) though some of the features of this specimen are not entirely unlike 
those on pages 438-39, though your specimen to me has an elaboration of feather- 
work which has a Mexican appearance. 
‘I know of no pipe at all resembling the one you have more than to say it 
belongs to the type of bi-conical pipes." 
Ета. 87.— Ceremonial palette for paint. (Full size.) 
Part of a limestone pipe of ordinary type lay with a burial which will be 
described in detail later in the report. 
With the exception of these two pipes no others of earthenware or of stone 
were met with at our second investigation of Moundville. 
Nine entire dises (in diameter from 11.5 to 4.5 inches) and five fragments, 
1“ Pipes and Smoking Customs of the American Aborigines," by Joseph D. MeGuire. Report 
of the U. S. National Museum for 1897, 
