538 SOME ABORIGINAL SITES ON RED RIVER. 
described as probably being ornaments formerly attached to other objects that 
have disappeared. А . Кол; 
То the right of the lower part of the burial, but not immediately with it, was 
a shell drinking-cup having a perforation through the beak and another near the 
opening, between the shoulder and the suture. Unfortunately, immediately across 
the opening of the cup, where a third perforation probably was, the shell has been 
broken by a blow of a pick. By the aid of three holes placed as described, the 
cup could hang horizontally. This cup, the usual Fulgur perversum, like others 
found in this mound, is neatly smoothed as to the outer surface, but bears no en- 
graved decoration. Immediately beyond this shell lay an earthenware vessel in 
fragments. 
In the right-hand lower corner of the grave, 13 inches above its base, however, 
lay a celt of silicious rock, 5 inches in length. 
BuRIAL NUMBER 6. 
The pit in which Burial No. 6 lay was distinguishable downward from about 
2 feet 5 inches below the surface, where it was lost in the moist ground. The 
grave, 13 feet below the summit-plateau, measured, where the burial lay, 6 feet 8 
inches and 7 feet 2 inches as to the sides, and 4 feet 6 inches and 4 feet 9 inches as 
to the ends. 
The skeleton, that of an adult and probably of a male, lay at full length on 
the back, the head pointing SE. The skull was badly crushed, and the other bones 
were in equally poor condition. 
Near the right knee were five pipes—or at least five bowls and stems or parts 
of stems—in fragments. The stems of the pipes lay along the thigh, the bowls 
Ета. 29.—Arrowheads of flint. Haley Place, Ark. (Full size.) 
being toward the knee. These pipes formed the lower limit of a group of objects 
which continued in line up along the thigh in the following order: a kitchen pot; 
a bottle; a kitchen vessel. These vessels were crushed to bits, as were all from 
this grave, with one exception. 
About one foot to the left of the middle of the left thigh, together, were four 
flint arrowheads of interesting shape (Fig. 29), and near these was a shell object, flat, 
