124 REPORT OF NATIONAL MUSEUM, 1884. 



Santa Barbara County, California: Chips and flakes, rude chipped im- 

 plements, arrow and spearheads (the .latter very fine), scrapers, pestles, 

 grinding-stones, mortars, vessels, baking-stones, tubes, pipes (plain and 

 ornamented), beads and other ornaments of stone, Haliotis-ske>Us show- 

 ing use as utensils (one very large), shell beads, discs (pierced), fish- 

 hooks and ornaments, a copper bead and glass and enamel beads of 

 European manufacture, remains of matting and bags, soap-root brushes 

 with handles of asphaltum, handles made of asphaltum and ornamented 

 with shells, red paint cut in various shapes, an iron axe, and several 

 knife-blades, brass bell-tongues, china cups and a saucer. 



Army Medical Museum, Washington, D. C. — Collection embracing 

 grooved stone mauls and axes, a celt, rubbing-stones, a metate (Navajo), 

 an arrow-shaft grinder, a small stone mortar, shell beads, and several 

 bone implements from Arizona and Dakota Territories ; also a fine bird- 

 shaped object of stone from Saekett's Harbor, New York. 



P. L. Jouy, Yokohama, Japan. — Collection of rude chipped imple 

 ments and fragments of polished celts from Yokohama, rude chipped 

 implements found 20 miles from Tokio, and fragments of bones and 

 shells from the shell-heaps at Omori. 



Dr. G. B. Lartigue, BlacJcville, Barnwell County, South Carolina. — A 

 pierced ceremonial object (very fine), found near Blaekville. 



Dr.C. A. White, United States National Museum, and Dr. J. A. White, 

 Oregon City, Oregon. — A collection of 001 small arrow-heads of chalcedony, 

 jasper, obsidian, &c, from two points on the east bank of the Willa- 

 mette River $ one a mile above and the other a mile below Oregon 

 City. They were exposed by the washing and caving of the river-bank. 



Dr. W. W. Oglesby, Fossil, Wasco County, Oregon. — A very fine sword- 

 shaped stone club, found imbedded in the roots of a fir-tree (supposed 

 to be 300 years old), near Mary's Park, Wasco County. 



A. Fairhurst, Lexington, Kentucky. — Collection from the vicinity of 

 Lexington : Eude and leaf-shaped implements, cutting-tools, perforators, 

 arrow and spear-heads, a very fine celt of greenish jasper (chipped and 

 polished), polished celts, a celt- gouge of syenite (the best object of this 

 class thus far acquired), a hematite muller, a discoidal stone, a ceremo- 

 nial object (partly drilled), and a pipe. 



Prof. S. F. Baird. — Collection from shell -heaps on the Bay of Funcly : 

 Chips and flakes of flint, quartzite, lydite, &c, rude arrow-heads, frag- 

 ments of pottery, vertebrae and spines of fishes, bones of birds, bones 

 and teeth of the seal, beaver, deer, caribou, moose, mink, otter, black 

 bear, and dog ; bones split for the extraction of the marrow, and shells 

 (3 species, determined), of which the heaps are composed. This collec- 

 tion is referred to in "Proceedings of the United States National Mu- 

 seum," vol. 4, p. 292. 



B. F. Koons, Mansfield, Tolland County, Connecticut. — Square slab of 

 granite with mortar-cavity, cut from rock in situ, near Mansfield. A 

 very interesting piece. 



