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



Vessel No. 41. — Parts of a bowl lying over a few remnants of long-bones of a 



young person. The decoration consists of a series of designs similar to the one 



shown in Fig. 35. 



Vessel No. 42. — A double cup found by the side of the skull of a child. 



Diameters, 4 inches by 2.5 inches; 

 height, 2.6 inches. There is a scroll 

 decoration incised on the rather in- 

 ferior ware (Fig. 36). Each base 

 is perforate but not through the 

 knocking out of fragments as in 

 the other cases noted by us, but by 

 means of careful cutting while the 

 clay was soft. We have referred to 



this custom, so often met with in peninsular Florida, at the beginning of the 



description of this mound. 



Fig. 35. — Decoration ; Vessel No. 41. Mound at Wal 

 Camp. (One-third size.) 



Vessel No. 43.— A 



Fig. 37.— Vessel No. 43. Mound at Walton's Camp. 



bowl of poor material with incised decoration, having on 

 one side, as handles, two upright 

 effigies of the human head. At the 

 other side, a flat handle such as 

 usually represents the tail in bird- 

 effigy vessels of the middle Missis- 

 sippi district, projects horizontally. 

 A considerable part of the base is 

 missing. Maximum diameter, 9 

 inches; depth, 4 inches (Fig. 37). 

 Vessel No. 44. — A small vessel 

 shattered by a blow from a spade. 

 Infant bones were in association. 



