1881. ] Archeology in Vermont. 433 
other singular specimen, which should, perhaps, be classed with 
the above, is quite rudely made of a dark, micaceous rock ; it is 
triangular in outline, being at the edge 1.9 inch wide and growing 
narrower towards the other end, which forms a blunt point. In 
: Fics. 6, 7.—Indian Gouges. Full size. 
thickness the reverse is true, as this is over an inch at the upper 
end, from which it grows less towards the edge. The groove, if it 
fan be called such, is a small elliptical excavation about a fourth 
of an inch from the edge. This implement probably shows us the 
