CERTAIN ABORIGINAL REMAINS OF THE N. W. FLORIDA COAST. 477 



Vessel No. 11. — A bottle similar to Vessel No. 10, with base perforation, holes 

 for suspension and white material in the incised lines. Maximum diameter, 4.6 

 inches; height, 4.4 inches; aperture, 1.4 inches (Fig. 81). This bottle lay almost 

 in contact with one of the skulls to which we have referred. 



Vessel No. 12. — A bottle of inferior ware, rudely incised. The base is imper- 

 forate. Maximum diameter, 2.5 inches; height, 3.1 inches; aperture, 1 inch 

 (Fig. 82). This bottle lay about 2 feet 8 inches down and about 9 inches below the 

 mass of bones to which reference has been made. With it were small fragments 

 of human remains. 



Vessel No. 13. — An undecorated, wide-mouthed bottle with body heart- 

 shaped in outline. The base is perforate. This bottle lay almost inverted. No 

 bones remained near it. Diameter of body, 6.6 inches; height, 7.5 inches; 

 diameter of aperture, 3.8 inches (Fig. 83). 



Vessel No. 14. — An imperforate bowl partly crushed by a large root, since 

 pieced together. The decoration, incised, represents highly conventionalized bird- 

 wings though, in this case, the head and the tail of the bird do not appear 



Fig. 84.— Vessel No. 14. Cemetery near Point Washingti 



on the bowl. In one instance, to the reader's left, on the bowl (Fig. 84) 

 the circle has not been filled in as have the others. Maximum diameter, 13 

 inches ; depth, 6.3 inches. This bowl lay inverted over the skull of an adult. 

 Beneath the skull were a number of long-bones while one foot lower down was 

 another skull. These bones were apparently the advance guard of a mass of 

 remains behind and to one side of them which formed the deposit with the 

 eleven crania to which we have referred. 



Vessel No. 15. — Possibly part of a small bottle, though the aperture seems 

 too smooth to mark the presence of a fracture. The decoration, incised and 

 punctate, confined to the top of the body, is given, with section, in Fig. 85. 



Vessel No. 16. — A large fragment lying by the side of Vessel No. 17. The 

 decoration, a common one, consists of a series of concentric diamonds with 

 central circles. 



