ISO 
that upon the Pemberton axe. Mr. Gaskill appears to have 
attached no particular importance to the discovery, and he at 
once presented the specimen to Dr. Evans when he asked for 
it. The original is of a grey, compact sandstone. The inscrip- 
tion in parts retains the brown, decomposed appearance of the 
general surface of the axe ; only a few of the characters, by 
their freshness, show the recent attempt to deepen them. 
Stone Arrow- and Spear-Heads. 
B 31. 
Upon Tablets i to 3 are flint spear-heads, found in Texas. 
Upon Tablet 4 is a flint arrow-head, found in Missouri. Upon 
Tablet 5 are three flint arrow-heads, found at Warsaw, Illinois. 
Upon Tablet 6 are two flint arrow-heads, found in Indiana. 
Upon Tablet 7 are four flint arrow-heads, found in Kentucky. 
Upon Tablets 8 to 10 are arrow- and spear-heads of flint and 
milky quartz, found in Virginia. Upon Tablet 1 1 is a flint 
arrow-head, found in Pennsylvania. Upon Tablet 12 are stone 
arrow-heads, found in New Jersey. Upon Tablet 13 is a stone 
"gorget,"^ found in a shell-mound f at Rockland, Long Island. 
Upon Tablet 14 are two flint arrow-heads, found on the bank of 
the Hudson river, near West Point, New York. Upon Tablet 15 
are flint flakes, found in Ohio. Upon Tablets 16 to 28 are 
arrow- and spear-heads of flint, milky quartz, and other varieties 
of stone, found in Ohio. 
B 32. 
Upon Tablets i to 24 are arrow- and spear-heads of flint, 
milky quartz, and other varieties of stone, found in Ohio. 
Of the triangular type, X which, perhaps, is not so elongated 
as in European examples, the following specimens may be 
noticed: — c Tablet 8, d and d Tablet 12, a Tablet 21, all in 
Case B 31. 
Of the leaf-shaped, § a and d Tablet 3, Case B ; a and d 
Tablet 14, and the specimens on Tablets 15 and 16, Case B 32, 
are the most typical examples. Some of these specimens have 
* See pages 127, 128, 
+ See page 59. 
X See page 25. 
§ See page 26. 
