CERTAIN ABORIGINAL REMAINS OF THE N. W. FLORIDA COAST. 485 



head of a frog much in the manner of heads we see on bowls from Nicaragua. 

 Below are incised designs intended for legs and feet. Symbols encircle the upper 

 part of the bowl. Maximum diameter, 15.7 inches; depth, 7.2 inches (Fig. 99). 



Vessel No. 37. — This bowl, badly crushed by roots, lay inverted over the 

 skull of an adult. Restored, the base shows a perforation. The decoration, the 

 well-known scroll, has a pink material inset in the lines (Fig. 100). Maximum 

 diameter, 15.5 inches; depth, 7 inches. 



Fig. 100.— Vessel N 



Cemetery near Point Washington. 



Vessel No. 38. — Inverted, but with the rim slightly tilted upward, were two 

 halves of a bowl over a skull in fragments with a few long-bones. These two 

 halves did not lie as though placed in the mound as a whole, and subsequently 



Fig. 101.— Decoration, Vessel No. : 



r Point Washington. (One-third s 



fractured, since a broken margin of one side was turned away from the correspond- 

 ing margin of the other side. 



Vessel No. 39. — This beautiful little bowl of black ware, imperforate, lay on 

 its base, unassociated. The decoration, incised, is shown in Fig. 101. The upper 

 part, the partially interlocked scroll, is uniform throughout. Below, the designs 

 would seem to connect the vessel with that class bearing projecting heads and tails 

 of fish, on which some of these symbols often appear. Maximum diameter, 5.5 

 inches ; depth, 2 inches. 



Vessel No. 40. — Resting on its base was a perforate bowl (Fig. 102), 15.8 

 inches in maximum diameter and 8.2 inches in depth. The incised decoration 

 represents a conventional animal head with other parts of the body. Within this 



