442 CERTAIN ABORIGINAL REMAINS OF THE N. W. FLORIDA COAST. 



graph used in the half-tone was furnished us with the measurements : maximum 

 diameter, 17.25 inches; depth, 5.75 inches (Fig. 19). 



Vessel No. 7. — The larger part of a six-pointed dish of black ware, found in 

 fragments and sent to the Davenport Academy of Natural Science, Davenport, 

 Iowa. We shall have occasion, later, to refer to this type. 



Fig. 19.— Vessel No. 6. Mound at Walton's Camp. 



I No. 8. — A bowl, broken, with base perforation, found lying about 2 feet 

 from a bunched burial, at an angle of about forty-five degrees, aperture up. It has 

 been pieced together and sent to the Museum at Memorial Hall, Fairmount Park, 

 Philadelphia. The decoration, incised, is much like that on Vessel No. 40 (Fig. 

 102) from the cemetery near Point Washington. Maximum diameter, 10.2 inches ; 

 depth, 4.1 inches. 



Vessel No. 9. — This vessel, much resembling a cap in shape with visor before 

 and behind, is said to belong to a class modelled after trays of wood. It is unbroken 



Fig. 20.— Vessel No. 9. Mound at Walton's Camp. (Half size.) 



save for a basal perforation. It is of yellow ware, and is notched around the 

 margin except at the handles. There is an incised meander decoration. Major 

 diameter, 10.5 inches; minor diameter, 8.25 inches; depth, 3.6 inches (Fig. 20). 

 It lay, inverted, over a single fragment of bone, though others had probably 

 disappeared through decay. 



