348 ABORIGINAL SITES ON TENNESSEE RIVER. 
Burial No. 73, extended on the back. 
Burial No. 74, at full length, face down. 
Burial No. 75, the skeleton of a child about two years of age, lay in a grave, 
showing no mark of fire. At the neck were five globular beads of shell to which 
had been attached a shell gorget of unusual shape (Fig. 74). Shell beads also 
were at the ankles, making 103 in all for this burial. At the feet was a painted 
bowl about 5.5 inches in diameter (Plate VIII, Fig. 2) of the fine ware noted in 
Fra. 75.— Design of decoration on vessel with Burial No. 75. (Halí-size.) 
connection with the bowl from the stone grave in this mound. This bowl, 
standing upright, had upon it a pot of the usual coarse ware, having two loop- 
handles and containing a carved spoon of shell. 
The design on the bowl, part of which suggests the swastika, is shown in 
diagram (Fig. 75), the painted portions represented by cross-hatch lines. This 
design is in part similar to one on a bowl from New Mexico, described by Doctor 
Fewkes,' and incidentally we would call attention to a dancing female figure on 
a vessel described in the same work? which greatly resembles one on a bowl found 
1J. Walter Fewkes, “Archeology of the Lower Mimbres Valley," Smithsonian Misc. Coll., 
Vol. LXIII, No. 10, Fig. 31. 
? Plate I, No. 2. 
