126 ANTIQUITIES OF THE OUACHITA VALLEY. 
three flakes of chert; part of the incisor of a beaver. The arrowheads with this burial 
pointed in different directions, so it is evident they had not belonged to a bunch of 
arrows when buried; a few inches from the pile of arrowheads just described was 
another pile consisting of thirty-eight points, all of chert, the points also directed in 
different ways; a small mass of hematite, roughly spheroidal. 
Burial No. 243, parts of a skull. Glass beads; two disks of brass, each 2.3 inches 
in diameter, one each side of the head. These disks are without perforation. 
On one side of one disk are tufts of black hair, 
preserved by the copper salts, which, so far 
as Dr. Ales Hrdlicka, and Doctor Miller of the 
Division of Mammals, United States National 
Museum, can determine, is human hair (Fig. 
121). 
Burial No. 246, fragments of bone. A per- 
forated ceremonial axe of limonite, much deteri- 
orated, of the type known as “ hoe-shaped,” hav- 
ing in places a deposit of hematite, dimensions 
7.25 inches by 5.25 inches; one vessel of earth- 
enware. 
Burial No. 250, teeth. Glass beads; a peb- 
ble of chert. 
Burial No. 252, fragments of a skull. Double-pointed spike of iron or of steel, 
8.75 inches in length; one shell bead. | 
Burial Хо. 253, part of а skull. Two earthenware vessels; a mass of red pig- 
ment (oxide of iron). 
Burial No. 255, teeth. One earthenware vessel, glass beads. 
Apart from human remains (omitting vessels of earthenware not found asso- 
ciated with artifacts of other kinds) there came from the Keno Place cemetery : 
Glass beads, one from the surface. 
Two handsome leaf-shaped implements of cherty material; one, 7.5 inches in 
length by 2.7 inches wide; the other, 6.7 inches long and 1.4 inch in width; also 
one of the same material 2.7 inches long by .75 inch wide. 
A “spade-shaped” ceremonial axe, probably of metamorphic rock, 6 inches 
long by 4.75 inches in maximum width, approximately, with perforation irregularly 
drilled. 
Five “celts,” the majority of sedimentary rock, the largest about 6 inches in 
length. 
An elliptical ornament of shell. 
A mass a red pigment (iron oxide). 
Fragments of corroded sheet-copper or sheet-brass. 
One chisel made from a chert pebble. 
A pendant of hematite (Fig. 122), 
A deposit consisting of twelve small chisels wrought from pebbles of chert; 
Ета. 121.— Brass disk with human hair attached. 
Keno Place. (Full size.) 
