130 
Plate LV 
Ontario 
Pottery 
Fragments of pottery. Iroquoian type. From an Iroquoian site, 
lots 2 and 3, con. VI, near Roebuck, Augusta tp., Grenville co., Ont. 
Algonkian Indian area. Collected by W. J. Wintemberg, on Geological 
Survey, Canada, expedition. In Victoria Memorial Museum; ? natural 
size. Also illustrated in photograph, negative, Cat. No. 40408. This 
general type of decoration is found in Quebec, Ontario, Vermont, New 
York, and Pennsylvania. 
Figure 1, Cat. No. VIII-F-9936a. 
Figure 2, Cat. No. VIII-F-9611. 
Figure 3, Cat. No. VIII-F-1 1307a. 
Figure 4, Cat. No. VIII-F-9628. 
Figure 5, Cat. No. VIIl-F-96G2a. 
Figure 6, Cat. No. VIII-F-9939. 
Figure 7, Cat. No. VIII-F-9686a. Lines made with a stamp (compare Figure 7, Plate 
LIV), rare on Iroquoian ware but common on Algonkian (compare Plate LX VI). 
Figure 8, Cat. No. VIII-F-10535. 
Figure 9, Cat. No. VIII-F-13188. The criss-cross design is common on Iroquoian pottery 
(compare Figures 1, Plate LIV, and 4, Plate LXIV). It is found on Iroquoian pottery 
from the Iroquoian area in New York (See Figure 88, Beauchamp, Earthenware). It 
is also found on Algonkian pottery, compare Figures 4-6 and 17, Plate LXVII. The 
vertical row of circles (compare Figures 6, Plate LIV; 5-9, Plate LVIII; 4, Plate LIX; 
1, Plate LX; 2, 3, and 5, Plate LXII; and 8, Plate LXIII) is found on Iroquoian 
pottery from the Iroquoian area in Montreal (See Figures 14 and 22b, Dawson, Fossil 
Men), Ontario, Vermont, and New York, and on Iroquoian pottery from Algonkian 
area m Victoria co., Ont. The lower line of scallops was maae by pinching with the 
finger tips, compare Figure 5, Plate LXIV. 
