462 SOME ABORIGINAL SITES. 
shell gorgets similar to those found with Burial No. 34, which presumably had 
been arranged around the neck, judging from the position in which they were 
found. 
Burial No. 52, closely flexed on the left. Near this skeleton was part of that 
of a dog, the rest having been removed by a neighboring burial with which 
other bones belonging to the same dog's skeleton were found. At the back of the 
neck of Burial No. 52 was an object of limestone, 4.1 inches in length, some- 
what resembling a bar amulet, but without perforation. 
Burial No. 53, closely flexed on the right, lying at the bottom of a grave 
5.5 feet from the surface and extending about 2 feet into the underlying, yellow 
sand, had a piercing implement of bone on the pelvis. 
Burial No. 56, closely flexed on the right, had at each ear a curved ornament 
of shell of the kind already several times described. At the top of the skull was 
a mass of gray clay, probably a pigment, and a rude implement of flint. 
Burial No. 60, an infant in a grave pit, having shell beads at the neck, among 
which was a long, tubular one of shell, a central piece, no doubt. 
Burial No. 61, closely flexed on the left, having a mass of pigment (hematite) 
at the right of the skull. 
Burial No. 62, an infant. Near the head were shell beads and two of the 
curved strips of shell well known at this place. 
Burial No. 64, a child lying with the skeleton next to be described, that of 
an adult. On the chest of the child, hanging downward and extending over 
on the pelvis of the adult, where presumably they had swung at the time of 
burial, was a rouleau of discoidal beads of shell, each about .7 inch in diameter, 
having centrally in the string a barrel-shaped bead of jet and terminally an 
ornament of eopper about 4 inches in length, somewhat resembling a small, 
ceremonial blade. At the cutting edge, however, is a perforation for suspension. 
Many small, shell beads were on the chest. 
Burial No. 65, closely flexed on the left, had on the pelvis a bone pin and 
two incisors of the beaver. 
Burial No. 67, partly flexed to the right. Near the skull was an arrowhead 
or knife. On the right side of the thorax lay a netting needle of antler (Fig. 13, 
C), between the closely flexed forearm and the ribs. Some distance away, on 
the upper part of the pelvis, lay a beautiful sizer of silicious rock (Plate X, J). 
Burial No. 71, closely flexed on the left, had on the pelvis a lancehead or 
knife, of flint, about 3 inches in length. 
Burial No. 72, closely flexed on the left. Near the skull were two lance- 
heads or knives, respectively about 3.5 inches and 4 inches in length, and another 
nearby 4.25 inches long. Under the thorax was a mass of gray clay, probably a 
pigment, and under the left shoulder was an object of fine-grained sandstone, 
which seems to have been part of a small sizer, an indication of the original per- 
foration remaining on one side of the object as it now is. An effort apparently 
was made to drill a hole longitudinally through it, but the attempt was abandoned 
