150 ANTIQUITIES OF THE OUACHITA VALLEY. 
Етв. 157.— Vessel Хо. 48. Keno Place. 
(Height 4.6 inches.) 
Ете. 158.—Vessel No. 437. Keno Place. Ете. 159.— Vessel Хо. 373. Keno Place. 
(Diam. 2.1 inches.) (Full size.) 
Vessel No. 48. An ovoid vessel of inferior, yellow clay, with flat base sur- 
rounded by incised lines, between which and similar lines at the apex are three 
meander designs. There are two holes for suspension (Fig. 157). 
Vessel No. 437, This vessel, of soft, yellow ware, with flat base, possibly 
represents a gourd, though the presence of a double stem is hard to explain (Fig. 
158). 
Vessel No. 373. This curious little object of unusual form is unlike anything 
found by us elsewhere in the Ouachita valley (Fig. 159). 
The Keno Plantation is but four miles in a stralght line from Glendora on 
Ouachita river. Both these places were important sites; both contained European 
artifacts; they had, as might be expected, Interesting points in common, but, on the 
other hand, they showed divergent features. 
We find in the two cemeteries mortuary deposits of pottery, arranged in great 
diversity of grouping, and tributes of ornaments of brass and of glass beads, placed 
