386 ABORIGINAL SITES ON TENNESSEE RIVER. 
A few inches from the head was a pot having two loop-handles and a row made 
up of six small projections encircling the body below the rim. 
Burial No. 100, adolescent. The trunk lay on the back, the left arm and 
forearm along the trunk, the right arm being beside the body, the forearm across 
it above the pelvis. The thighs were flexed up- 
ward, the legs back against them. The head 
was directed SSE.; the depth was 18 inches. 
Three tubular, bone beads, each about 1.5 inch in 
length, were near the skull, which was saved in a 
somewhat damaged condition, and without the 
lower jaw, which was not present. 
Here ends the list of burials found by us 
near the Citico mound, though doubtless many 
others were left behind, especially in the ridge. 
So numerous were intersecting graves in parts 
of the elevation and consequent disturbances of 
xc ыл : burials that dissociated objects or artifacts with 
Fre. 94.—Pipe of earthenware. scattered bones were fairly plentiful in the soil, 
кызны йа мааа а the following objects having been found in the 
elevation: a number of triangular arrowheads of flint; shell beads; three un- 
decorated shell gorgets and one with a design partly dédaved away ; two earthen- 
ware pipes, one of which, shown in Fig. 94, belongs to the class representing a 
Fic. 95.—Vessel of earthenware. Citico, Tenn. (Diam. 7 inches.) 
conventional beak of a bird, noted before at this place; one undecorated pipe of 
claystone; three undecorated pots of earthenware, one with rude, line decora- 
tion, another showing somewhat more ambitious endeavor (Fig. 95); an earthen- 
ware trowel, mushroom-shaped; a number of small, discoidal stones, one bicave; 
two small celts of iron or of steel; a leaf-shaped implement of flint, with part 
of one edge broken out; a bone tube 2.5 inches in length. 
