CERTAIN ABORIGINAL REMAINS OF THE N. W. FLORIDA COAST. 443 



Yessel No. 10. — A small bowl found with many fragments of earthenware just 

 below the surface. 



Vessel No. 11. — This interesting bowl of excellent red ware is intact with the 

 exception of a mortuary perforation. It la}% inverted, over the skull of an adult, 

 the skull of an adolescent, a few vertebrae and the clavicle of a child. The deco- 

 ration, incised, uniform all around, consists of a series of conventionalized heads in 

 which the eye and teeth are prominent. Maximum diameter, 15.25 inches ; depth, 

 6 inches (Fig. 21). , 



No. 11. Mound at Walton's Camp. (About half size.) 



Vessels Nos. 12 and 13. — Small bowls from the same deposit as Vessel No. 10. 

 One has three small handles. A fourth handle is missing. The other, with incised 

 and punctate decoration much resembling that on Vessel No. 24, this mound, has 

 been sent to Memorial Hall, Fairmount Park, Philadelphia. Both vessels are per- 

 forate as to the base. 



Vessels Nos. 14, 15, 16. — Vessel No. 14, a counterpart of Vessel No. 9, this 

 mound, lay inverted, in fragments, on a dish of black ware also inverted. This 

 dish, with incised and punctate decoration, is six pointed, or star-shaped. There 

 is a base-perforation. Maximum diameter, 14.75 inches; depth, 3 inches (Fig. 22). 

 This interesting type, as we have stated, we believe to be new. Professor Putnam 

 and Professor Holmes had not seen it previously. Partly between Vessels Nos. 14 

 and 15 lay a portion of a vessel in fragments. All this ware lay above an infant's 

 skull. Vessel No. 14, pieced together, has been sent to Memorial Hall, Fairmount 

 Park, Philadelphia. 



Vessels Nos. 17 and 18. — Small bowls found together just below the surface 

 apart from human remains. 



Vessels Nos. 19 and 20. — Vessel No. 19, a circular dish of crude black ware, 



57 JOUEN. A. N. S. PHILA., VOL. XL 



