
E 
ee 

Horse Landing. 
OF ST. JOHNS RIVER, EAST FLORIDA. 455 
are mentioned by Le Moyne, though his figures, drawn from 
memory, as might be expected, do not agree with this or 
any other species. 
Besides the implements of bone already mentioned, a por- 
: tion of the radius of a bear, which had been divided by cut- 
ting a groove around the outside and breaking the rest, was 
= found at Old Town; and Mr. Bowditch gave me the antler 
of a deer which had been similarly treated, and which he 
found at Enterprise. : 
Articles of Stone. The collection of stone implements was 
quite small, only twenty-five or thirty pieces, nearly all of 
which were picked up on the shores near Old Enterprise, 
only a few being actually dug from the mounds. A single 
* chisel of the ordinary form, and with a remarkably sharp 
edge, was found at Old Town, but all the other articles were 
either arrow or spear-points, and none of them had unusual 
pes. No pipes or fragments of them were found at any 
Fig. 10, Pl. 10 (half natural size), represents the rude at- 
tempt at an arrow-head, mentioned on p. 403, and found by 
Mr. Peabody under the lowest portion of the shell-heap at 
We will add to the above two pieces of worked shell, both 
of which were, however, taken from the burial-mound at 
Black Hammock, near the shell-heap, but were undoubtedly 
M common use among the natives. 
Fig. 11, Pl. 10 (natural size), is an ornament cut from that 
| Portion of a Pyrula, namely, the suture, where one whorl 
Joms the preceding, and is bent to nearly a right angle; the 
length of the upright portion is 45 m. m., and the disk at the 
ttom Measures 31 by 24 m. m. i 
Fig. 12, Pl. 10 (natural size), a disk of shell, 18 m. m. in 
ameter, and 5 m, m, thick, with a hole drilled through the 
“entre. A similar one is figured by Schoolcraft. * 
_Hemains of Animals. The subjoined table gives a com- 

*Notes on the Iroquois. Albany, 1847, p. 243. 
