1883. | Catlinite. 759 
and is inlaid with lead.” This pipe has been presented to the 
Academy, and the material is pronounced catlinite. 
In addition to the recent pipes, the Davenport Museum con- 
tains “four red, three partly red and partly ash colored, and 
twelve wholly of ash color, but running in some to a slate color, 
considerably darker,” all but three of which have been taken 
directly from mounds, and those three found in their immediate 
Vicinity. One of the most interesting specimens of these earlier 
forms yet brought to my notice, is the wild-cat pipe, from the 
Toolesboro’ mound, represented in Fig. 9 (museum No. 4558) 
` Fic. 9.—Antique pipe from a Toolesboro’ mo 
which is made of a variegated pipestone of a dull red or brown 
color, mottled with patches and spots of ash, some gray, greenish 
and light red. This was found associated with copper implements 
and pieces of galena, 
und, Iowa. 
Fic. 1o—From a mound near Davenport, Iowa. 
Another example shown in Fig. 10 (museum No. 4575), a com- 
