154 
Canada, 
B 30. 
Upon Tablet i are pieces of worked elk -horn ; a is made into 
a chisel. Upon Tablet 2 are some bone tools ; a and b are bone 
awls, used to pierce the birch bark for canoes, preparatory to 
sewing it together ; is a bone chisel. Upon Tablet 3 is a 
clay bead ; b, c, fif, and e are bone beads, probably intended to 
be strung and worn as ornaments. Such specimens as d and e, 
however, may have been applied to other purposes, for instance, 
as studs or buttons. See a similar piece of bone, used as a 
button, attached to a New Zealand flute, No. 3, Case H 23. 
Upon Tablet 3 /"is part of the stem of a smoking-pipe. Upon 
Tablets 4 to 9 are flint arrow- and spear-heads. The specimens 
upon Tablets i to 9 were presented to the Collection by Mr. E. 
A. Caviller, of Ontario, by whom they were found. The objects 
upon Tablets i to 3 were found in heaps of ashes, upon the site 
of an Indian camp, county Simcoe, Ontario. The flint arrow- 
heads were chiefly found in county Brant. The leaf-shaped 
flint implement, a, upon Tablet 5, may be a knife ; the point 
is too thick for this object to have been used as the head 
of a spear ; moreover, all the evidence of wear is at the broad 
end. It was found by Mr. Caviller on the Crand River, below 
Brantford. It may be noticed that the arrow-head, a, upon 
Tablet 7, has been worked to a rounded end, instead of a point. 
The arrow-head, b, upon Tablet 7, appears to have been broken 
and re-pointed several times ; very little of the blade is left. 
The edge of the specimen, b, upon Tablet 8, is nicely serrated. 
Possibly c, upon Tablet 9, may not have been used as an arrow- 
head ; the edges are much worn, as if from scraping bone. 
Upon Tablet 10 is a triangular stone arrow-head. Upon 
Tablets 11 to 27 are flint and stone arrow- and spear-heads. 
A 42. 
Nos. 23 to 27 in this Case are from Canada. No. 23 is a 
wedge-shaped stone hatchet, found in Upper Canada ; it is very 
flat on the under surface, and was presented to the Collection 
by the late Mr. C. Witt, F.R.S. Nos. 24 and 25 are wedge- 
shaped stone hatchets. Nos. 26 and 27 are grooved stone axes. 
Nos. 24 and 25 were found in county Brant, by Mr. E. A. Caviller, 
by whom they were presented to the Collection. No. 27 was 
presented by the late Dr. Fowler, F.R.S. 
