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SOME ABORIGINAL SITES. 463 
(Fig. 15). "With this were several bone pins, all broken. An arrowhead or knife 
of flint lay near the left forearm. 
Burial No. 73, closely flexed to the right, had spread on the left thigh: a 
bone fish-hook, shown in Fig. 8; eight arrowheads or knives; part of another; 
two fragments of antler; jawbones of the woodchuck (Mar- 
mota monax); two bits of flint. 
Burial No. 75, partly flexed on the right, had at the neck 
two curved, perforated strips of shell, and a similar one on 
the chest. 
Burial No. 76, adolescent, closely flexed to the left. The 
skeleton lay on the bottom of a grave-pit, 6 feet 9 inches from 
the surface. The midden deposit at this place was 3 feet 5 
inches thick, so the bones lay 3 feet 4 inches deep in the un- 
derlying, yellow sand. Shell beads and tubular beads of bone - 
were around the neck; shell beads were at the left wrist. A 119 15-—Incom- 
: : : plete ornament of 
flint knife lay at the pelvis. üe-eruined `. sand- 
Burial No. 77, closely flexed on the right. Under the right stone. With Burial 
side of the thorax lay a netting needle of antler (Fig. 13, D), Xo. 72. "Тһе In- 
and immediately with it a sizer, also of antler (Fig. 9, C). ate ae 
Burial No. 78, a child. At the head were: two undecor- 
ated shell gorgets; a mass of glauconite, or green earth; a drill and probably a 
knife, of flint. 
Burial No. 80, closely flexed on the left, had at the neck shell beads and a 
large barrel-shaped bead of jet. 
Burial No. 82, a child about five or six years of age. Apparently a double 
string of shell beads had been placed around the back of the neck and continued 
down on each side of the chest in front to just above the pelvis, where they 
united. At this point lay a sizer of quartz (Plate X, E), its long axis corre- 
sponding with that of the child's body, some of the beads lying under the upper 
end of the sizer. With the sizer was its netting needle of antler (Fig. 10, H). 
About half-way down the strings of beads, on each side, was a barrel-shaped 
bead of jet. 
Curved shell ornaments, perforated strips of shell, were, one at the right 
shoulder, another about 4 inches away in the sand (Plate XII), the ornament 
nearest the skeleton lying among the beads. 
Burial No. 83, closely flexed on the left, having on the pelvis an arrowhead 
or knife, of flint. 
Burial No. 84, closely flexed to the right. At the outer side of the left shoulder 
in a heap and in no order, were: a rude, blunt tool of limestone; a grooved axe 
of limestone; a bone awl; three arrowheads or knives and two drills, all of flint; 
a fragment of flint; a number of unworked bones, mostly of the deer but some 
having belonged to birds, many broken; a sizer of antler (Fig. 9, E); its netting 
needle of antler, lying with it, too much crushed and decayed for exact restora- 
