92 
Plate XXXVI 
British Columbia Interior 
Figure 1. Perforated object made of abalone shell. From grave, Lytton, B.C. Thompso n 
SaUsh Indian area. Collected by Harlan I. Smith. Cat. No. 16-2950A in American, . 
Museum of Natural History, New York; \ natural size. After Figure 94, Smith, 
Lytton, 1899. 
Figure 2. Perforated object made of shell. From west of Fraser river near Lytton, B.C. 
Thompson, Salish Indian area. Collected by Harlan I. Smith. Cat. No. 16-3206A j 
in American Museum of Natural History, New York; 5 natural size. After Figure 92, < 
Smith, Lytton, 1899. 
Figure 3. Pendant made of elk tooth. From Lytton, B.C. Thompson, Salish Indian 
area. Collected by Harlan I. Smith. Cat. No. 16-3170 in American Museum of 
Natural History, New York; § natural size. After Figure 98, Smith, Lytton, 1899. 
Figure 4. Pendant made of a canine tooth. From Lytton, B.C. Thompson, Salish Indian 
area. Collected by Harlan I. Smith. Cat. No. 16-3174 in American Museum of 
Natural History, New York; \ natural size. After Figure 97, Smith, Lytton, 1899. 
Figure 5. Pendant made of elk tooth. From Lytton, B.C. Thompson, Salish Indian 
area. Collected by Harlan I. Smith. Cat. No. 16-3168A in American Museum of 
Natural History, New York; % natural size. After Figure 96, Smith, Lytton, 1899. 
Figure 6. Perforated object made of shell. From west of Fraser river near Lytton, B.C. 
Thompson, Salish Indian area. Collected by Harlan I. Smith. Cat. No. 16-3206B 
in American Museum of Natural History, New York; § natural size. After Figure j 
93, Smith, Lytton, 1899. 
Figure 7. Hammer or pestle made of stone. From Kamloops, B.C. Sliuswap, Salish 
Indian area. Collected by Harlan I. Smith. Cat. No. 16-2537 in American Museum 
of Natural History, New York; 5 natural size. After Figure 341b, Smith, Thompson, 
1900. This flaring shape is characteristic of the eastern part of the Thompson River 
area and the hat-shaped top is characteristic of the Thompson River area, but is 
also found on the British Columbia coast. 
Figure 8. Animal head formed by pecking on a hammer or pestle made of stone. From 
South Thompson valley, B.C. Thompson or Shuswap, Salish Indian area. Collected 
by A. B. Clarke, 1893. Cat. No. XI-A-757 (2800) in Victoria Memorial Museum, 
Ottawa, Canada; \ natural size. Also illustrated in Figure d, Plate XV, Smith, 
Archaeological, 1913. Negative and lantern slide, Cat. No. 18531 in Museum. This : 
long striking head is characteristic of the Thompson River area. 
Figure 9. Human form carved in stone. From Kamloops, B.C. Shuswap, Salish Indian 
area. In Provincial Museum, Victoria, formerly owned by C. Hill-Tout; | natural 
size. Casts, Cat. Nos. XI-A-938a-940 and XI-A-1256 in Victoria Memorial Museum, 
Ottawa, Canada. Also illustrated in Figure 380, Smith, Thompson, 1900, from cast, 
Cat. No. 16-2783 in American Museum of Natural History, New York. Front view 
illustrated in figure, p. 18, Hill-Tout, Notes, 1899. Other quarter illustrated on cover 
and in Figure e, Plate XV, Smith, Archaeological, 1913, from a cast, Cat. No. XI-A- 
938a, and in negative and lantern slide, Cat. No. 18531, in Museum. An extreme form 
of a type of dish made of stone, found solely in British Columbia from near Nanaimo 
on the coast to Kamloops in the interior, but chiefly in the Saanich-Yale area; illus- 
trated in Plates XV-XX. This shows influence of the art of the British Columbia 
coast. 
