470 SOME ABORIGINAL SITES. 
arrowhead, which demonstrates the result of how rude an effort sometimes saw 
actual use, is shown in Fig. 17a, both sides being represented. 
Burial No. 174, closely flexed on the left. Near the skull was an arrowhead 
of antler. 
Burial No. 179, adolescent, closely flexed to the right. A few shell beads 
encircled the right forearm. 
Burial No. 185, the skeleton of a child, slightly disturbed. Against the 
lower jaw was a small ornament of sheet-copper, somewhat broken. 
Burial No. 186, an infant with which was a mass of the red oxide pigment, 
about the size of a woman's fist. 
Burial No. 189, a young child. At the neck were four beads of shell and at 
the pelvis a tube of bone slightly smaller than the one described in connection 
with Burial No. 173. 
Burial No. 192, adolescent, closely flexed to the right. At the back of the 
skull lay a muller which, as this burial lay 6.5 feet from the surface in the under- 
lying yellow sand, presumably had been intentionally interred with the burial. 
Burial No. 196, a young infant lying at the bottom of a grave, 7 feet from 
the surface and extending nearly 3 feet into the sand. The bones were wonder- 
fully preserved for those of one so young. The bottom of the small grave-pit, 
about 21 inches in diameter, was covered with red hematite pigment. 
Burial No. 201, an infant. At the neck and on the thorax were discoidal 
shell beads and others made from the river shell Anculosa prerosa. With the 
beads was a small ellipse of shell with a large central opening, also a strip of 
shell about one inch in length, pointed at one end and having a perforation at 
the other. 
Burial No. 202, closely flexed on the left, the upper arms along the chest, 
the forearms partly flexed and almost in contact with the knees, which were 
about one foot from the forehead. Near the right knee and the right hand was 
a sizer of quartz (Plate XI, Н), having its needle of antler (Fig. 12, Е) only 2 
inches away. 
At the right hand were a sizer of antler (Fig. 9, J) and its needle of the same 
material (Fig. 12, D). i 
At the right shoulder was a grooved axe of limestone, the poll at the shoulder, 
the blade down the side of the burial. This skeleton lay 5 feet 6 inches deep, 
1.5 foot in the yellow sand, so that the axe evidently had been intentionally 
placed and was not an accidental apposition. | 
Burial No. 204, described elsewhere as to position. At the pelvis lay a flint 
knife or arrowhead. 
Burial No. 206, adolescent, partly flexed to the right. Around the neck 
were a few small, discoidal, shell beads and three larger ones of shell with a 
barrel-shaped bead of jet. 
Burial No. 208, a child. Placed side by side were two parts of a pestle of 
limestone which had been 13 inches in length, lying beside the skull. 
