webb] ARCHAEOLOGICAL SURVEY OF NORRIS BASIN 137 



Burial No. 3. — Under a pile of large flat stones 38 inches above 

 the floor of the mound the fully flexed skeleton of an adult was dis- 

 covered. The preservation was very poor. 



Burial No. 4. — Thirty-three inches above the mound floor was 

 found a body of indeterminate age and orientation. The bones were 

 in poor condition, having been broken and disturbed after burial. 



Burial No. 5. — On the original ground floor of the mound the 

 remains of a skeleton were found. The only portions which were 

 found were pieces of the skull. 



Burial No. 6. — Two inches above the original floor of the mound 

 the fully flexed skeleton of an adult male was found. The body had 

 been buried on the right side with the head to the west. The preser- 

 vation of the bones was very poor. One foot above the burial, and 

 in association with it, was found the much broken monitor, steatite, 

 platform pipe shown in plate 90, a. 



Burial No. 7. — This burial, which was 38 inches above the mound 

 floor, was so far destroyed by root action of the trees that its age 

 and orientation were not determinate. There remained merely a 

 grave area covered with fragmentary bones. 



Burial No. 8. — This was the fully flexed burial of a young adult. 

 The head was toward the east. This burial, which was on the orig- 

 inal ground surface, showed post-burial disturbance by other and 

 later burials. Some potsherds were found near the head. 



Burial No. 9. — Fifteen inches above the original surface of the 

 forest floor a disturbed burial, for which the orientation and dis- 

 position could not be determined, was found. 



Burial No. 10. — On the original floor of the forest a fully flexed 

 adult female had been buried. The body had been laid on its back 

 with the head to the east. Thirty inches above this burial were two 

 large flat limestone rocks under which was found a fragment of a 

 conch-shell bead. 



Burial No. 11. — A few inches below the present surface of the 

 mound the very poorly preserved remains of a human skeleton were 

 found. It was impossible to determine the age of the individual or 

 the disposition of the body. The head was pointed north. 



Burial No. 12. — Near the present surface of the mound the poorly 

 preserved remains of an individual of indeterminate age were dis- 

 covered. The body had been placed on its back with its head to the 

 southwest. 



Burial No. 13. — On the original ground surface, and covering an 

 area approximately 52 inches long and 50 inches wide, a group of 

 eight stones which formed a crude floor was found. In the group 

 of stones were the poorly preserved remains of an adult. The con- 

 dition of the bones was such that the orientation and disposition of 

 the body could not be determined. 



