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



Vessel No. 25. — A bowl 6.8 inches in diameter and 2.9 inches in depth, with 

 perforate base and incised and punctate decoration. This bowl came from just 

 below the surface (Fig. 25). 



Vessel No. 26. — A bowl of black ware, perforate, having a notched rim, incised 



and punctate decoration, lay 

 near Vessel No. 24. Maximum 

 diameter, 6 inches ; depth, 3.2 

 inches. This bowl, with small 

 protuberances, is, doubtless, a 

 life-form somewhat resembling 

 Vessel No. 49, this mound, 

 which, however, is more clearly 

 defined, distinctly representing 



Fig. 25.— Vessel No. 25. Mound at Walton's Camp. (Half size.) n 1 



a fish. 

 Vessel No. 27. — A perforate bowl found lying on its side near human remains. 

 The decoration is similar to that of Vessel No. 40 (Fig. 102) from the Cemetery 

 near Point Washington. Maximum diameter, 5.1 inches ; depth, 2.8 inches. 



Vessel No. 28. — Found, badly crushed, inverted over a few fragments of bone. 



The decoration, which Profes- 

 sor Holmes believes to be a 

 highly conventionalized head 

 with the eye above and parts 

 of the body on either side, is 

 shown in Fig. 26. 



Vessel No. 29. — A perfor- 

 ate bowl in fragments found 

 inverted over a skull and some 

 bones of an infant and certain 

 bones of a child with which 

 were a considerable number of 

 shells of Marginella, pierced 

 to use as beads. The decoration consists of a repetition of three upright wavy lines. 

 This bowl is now at the Peabody Museum. 



Vessel No. 30. — A perforate vessel 5.5 inches by 4.6 inches and 2.8 inches in 

 depth, representing a frog much after the manner of the ware of the middle 

 Mississippi district. The legs, fashioned separately and pressed upon the body, 

 have fallen off in part (Fig. 27). 



Vessel No. 31. — A bowl found, badly crushed, inverted over the skull of an 

 adult. This bowl, which has been pieced together, and sent to the Museum of 

 Natural History, New York, is imperforate. The decoration, incised and punctate, 

 consists of a series of designs as shown in Fig. 28, which doubtless represents jaws 

 with teeth and possibly an eye in the center. Maximum diameter, 16 inches ; 

 depth, 5 inches. 



Fig. 26.— Decoration 



Vessel No. 28. 

 (One-th 



's Camp. 



