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SOME ABORIGINAL SITES. 471 
Burial No. 209, a child. Shell beads and one of jet were at the neck. 
Burial No. 210, closely flexed on the back, at the bottom of a grave, 8 feet 
5 inches from the surface, extending 2 feet 2 inches into the sand. Around the 
neck were shell beads and a tubular one of claystone. Alongside the skull, in 
fragments, was a large drinking-cup made from the marine shell Busycon per- 
versum. 
Burial No. 211, adolescent, closely flexed on the left. On the upper part 
of the right side of the thorax were twenty-three discoidal beads of shell, each 
about .7 inch in diameter, and a fine bead of jet. 
On the lower part of the thorax was a sizer of limestone (Plate XI, E) and 
its netting needle of antler, somewhat decayed. 
Burial No. 212, closely flexed on the right. Shell beads and one of jet lay 
across the upper part of the thorax. 
Burial No. 216, a child, flexed closely on the right, having around the neck 
and extending down on the thorax a few discoidal shell beads and many made 
from the two species of Anculosa, often encountered at this site. Among these 
were: a barrel-shaped bead of claystone one inch in length; two perforated 
canine teeth of the bob-cat (Lynx rufus); and one of the curved shell strips 
having perforations, found at this site. 
On the lower part of the thorax, together, were a sizer of silicious material 
resembling jade (Plate X, G) and its needle of antler (Fig. 12, C). 
Burial No. 218, an infant. At the neck were shell beads and a barrel-shaped 
one of claystone. 
Burial No. 219, a child. At the pelvis was a small sizer of antler (Fig. 9, D) 
and its needle, the latter somewhat decayed and having part missing from a 
break in early times. 
Near the sizer was a bead of antler 1.2 inch in length and an arrowhead or 
knife of flint, another being at the right femur. A bone pin in fragments lay 
near the pelvis. 
Burial No. 222, partly flexed to the right. Fifteen shell beads were around 
the neck, and a fine barrel-shaped one of jet. 
Burial No. 226, closely flexed to the right. At the upper part of the left 
humerus was a bone awl; a flint scraper lay over the right elbow. 
Burial No. 229, adolescent, closely flexed on the left. On the thorax were a 
few shell beads. Between the knees and thorax was the carapace of a tortoise, 
having two holes at one end for suspension—doubtless part of a rattle. 
Burial No. 230, an infant, having five tubular shell beads at the neck, each 
from 1 inch to 1.6 inch in length, and a large tubular bead of jet. Near the 
beads were four gorgets of shell, bearing a rude decoration common to all, shown 
in Fig. 18. 
Burial No. 231. Parts of a skeleton interred on the back, the central portion 
missing. Around the neck were shell beads and a tubular bead of claystone. 
Near the right femur was an arrowhead of flint, while another arrowhead and a 
bone pin, together, were nearby. 
