CHIPPED AND FLAKED IMPLEMENTS OF NEW BRUNSWICK. 43 
Fig. 28. — One of the largest shouldered blades in the collection, 
four and one-half inches in length. It is a translucent, silicious 
sandstone, amber coloured at the point, and carnelian red at 
the base. The colours blend one into the other, producing a 
blade of unusual beauty. 
Fig. 29 is three and one-half inches in length, of light gray 
felsite. 
Fig. 30. — A very slender example from Grand Lake, 
Fig. 31.- — Is broader and shorter, a variation of Fig. 17, 
and one of the very common types. 
Figs. 32-37 show examples of notched blades found in New 
Brunswick. The collection contains sixty-one specimens which 
belong to this class. They vary much in size and form. 
Fig. 32 is very much like Fig. 15 in outline and size, but a 
much heavier blade, six and three-quarter inches in length, 
and is made of compact volcanic rock. 
Fig. 33. — This is a well made implement of red jasper, four 
and three quarter inches in length. This and the preceding 
specimen were found at Maquapit Lake and are unique. 
Figs. 34-37. — Are typical of this class of blade, and almost 
every possible variation within the limits shown by these four 
figures occur. 
Figs. 38-42 show types of barbed arrow-heads found in the 
Province, the collection containing twenty-one examples. Some 
of these are beautifully made and are not surpassed by any 
flaked implements found in eastern North America. 
Fig. 38 is an unusual form of which this is the only example. 
It is one and five-eighths inches in length, of compact silicious 
sandstone. 
Fig. 39. — This blade is unique. It was found on the Jemseg 
and differs in shape and material from all the arrow-heads in 
the collection. It is a type common in some Iroquoian areas 
and it is possible it may have been brought here by a Mohawk 
war party. 
Figs. 40, 41, 42. — Are all from central New Brunswick and 
are typical of barbed arrow-heads of the region. 
Fig. 43 is the only stemmed, notched and barbed arrow-head 
in the collection. The stem and part of one of the barbs is 
