THE NORTHWESTERN FLORIDA COAST REVISITED. 541 
Below Burial No. 112 was still another bowl, erushed (as were so many at 
this cemetery, though we have not felt it necessary to specify each ease), probably 
covering a third burial, but this bowl being under water, the question could not 
be determined where bones were so decayed. 
MOUND NEAR Mack Bayou, WALTON COUNTY. 
About one-eighth mile east of Mack bayou, on the shore of Hogtown bayou, 
was a mound of yellow sand, on property belonging to Dr. Charles E. Cessna, of 
Oak Park, Ill. 
This mound, about 2.5 feet in height and 28 feet in diameter, in which a hole 
about 3 feet square had been dug centrally previous to our coming, was practi- 
cally demolished by us. 
Thirty-two inches down, somewhat in from the margin, in sand considerably 
darker than that of the mound, forming a kind of deposit 18 inches by 3 feet and 
from 2 to 3 inches in thickness, was a pendant of ferruginous claystone, about 3.5 
inches in length, flat on three sides, convex on one of the major sides. The hole 
for suspension shows signs of wear on one side, as by acord. No bones were with 
this object, though presumably a burial had caused the discoloration of the sand. 
On the center of the base of the mound (not reached by the previous digging) 
was a bar-amulet of chloritic schist, also in dark sand in which no bones remained. 
An imperfect arrowhead or knife, of flint, and a hone of sandstone, apart, 
lay in the yellow sand of the mound. 
MOUND NEAR PHILIP’S INLET, BAY COUNTY. 
On hammock land, the property of Judge Ira A. Hutchinson, of Chipley, 
Fla., was a mound about 300 yards in from the Gulf beach and about one-half 
mile northwest from Philip’s Inlet. This mound, circular as to base, had a 
diameter of 45 feet. The height was difficult to determine, as the mound had 
been dug into centrally to a considerable extent, and the sand thrown out, covered 
with growth, resembled a part of the mound. Probably originally the altitude 
was between 4 and 4.5 feet. While several small trenches had been dug into the 
mound prior to our coming, the eastern part of it was intact. All this eastern 
part, all the central part including much surrounding the previous excavation, 
and most of the rest of the mound were dug down by us. 
Two burials only were encountered, 8 feet and 7 feet in from the margin, 
respectively, both near the pottery deposit to be described later. One burial 
consisted of a few decaying fragments of bones; the other was a small bunched 
burial badly decayed, having with it two celts which, like two other hatchets 
found apart from burials in this mound, are seemingly of eruptive rock. These 
varied between 5.5 and 8 inches in length. 
Also two arrowheads of flint and some bits of mica were found separately. 
On the base, near together, in the central part of the mound, were two de- 
posits of clamshells (Rangia cuneata nasuta), each consisting of about a quart. 
