170 CERTAIN ABORIGINAL MOUNDS OF THE SAVANNAH RIVER. 



Mr. J. D. McGuire, who has made an especial study of aboriginal tobacco pipes 

 and whose memoir on the subject will shortly be brought out by the National 

 Museum, says* of this pipe that the sjDecimen is the most interesting one of the pipes 



of this type, which belongs to Georgia and South Carolina, that has come under his 

 observation and by far the most elaborate one he knows of, though the pipe is related 

 to other interesting pipes from the same locality and also from North Carolina and 

 possibly from Tennessee. 



Fig. 11.— Tobacco-pipe of clay. Mound 



near Hudson's ferry. Showing front 



view. (Full size.) 



Fig. 12. — Tobacco-pipe of clay. Mound 



near Hudson's ferry. Showing rear 



view. (Full size.) 



Mr. Andrew E. Douglass, whose superb collection of pipes may be seen at the 

 Museum of Natural History, New York, writes of the bird-pipe as follows : " The 

 pipe represented in the cuts is, so far as I know, entirely unique. It represents 



