194 
Plate LXXXIV 
New Brunswick and Nova Scotia 
Figure 1. Decoration suggesting an imitation of stitching of spruce roots and porcupine 
quill embroidery on fragment of rim of pottery dish. Algonkian type. From Maqua- 
pit lake, central New Brunswick. Algonkian Indian area. Collected by Duncan 
London. In Museum of the Natural History Society of New Brunswick, St. John; 
§ natural size. From Figure a in photograph by Harlan I. Smith, negative, Cat. No. 
24462 in Victoria Memorial Museum, Ottawa, Canada. 
Figure 2. Gorget made of slate. Algonkian type. From farm of J. N. Powers, English 
Settlement, Johnston tp., Queens co., N.B. Micmac, Algonkian Indian area. 
Presented by J. F. Flindall, 1884. Cat. No. VIII-D-33 (1451) in Victoria Memorial 
Museum, Ottawa, Canada; J natural size. 
Figure 3. Design made up of incisions and notches on an awl made of bone. Algonkian 
type. From on top of layer of dark refuse, about 1 foot below surface in block 11, 
Eisenhauer shell-heap, Mahone bay, N.S. Micmac, Algonkian Indian area. Col- 
lected by W. J. Wintemberg on Geological Survey, Canada, expedition, 1913. Cat. 
No. VIII-B-102 in Victoria Memorial Museum; £ natural size. 
Figure 4. Pipe made of yellowish grey soapstone. Micmac type. From Denys river, 
Cape Breton, N.S. Micmac, Algonkian Indian area. Presented by W. McPherson, 
Cat. No. 65 in Provincial Museum, Halifax; | natural size. From Figure a in photo- 
graph by Harlan I. Smith, negative, Cat. No. 27784 in Victoria Memorial Museum, 
Ottawa, Canada. 
Figure 5. Pipe made of grey slate, now black. Micmac type. Apparently modern. 
From Micmac Indian on Halifax harbour, N.S., Micmac, Algonkian Indian area. 
Cat. No. 390 in W. J. Almon collection, Provincial Museum, Halifax; ^ natural size. 
From Figure c in photograph by Harlan 1. Smith, negative, Cat. No. 27784 in Victoria 
Memorial Museum, Ottawa, Canada. Also illustrated in Figure 98, Plate III, and 
described on pages 56-57, Piers, Relics, 1898. 
Figure 6. Pipe made of bluish grey soapstone with incising on the reverse about the same 
as on the obverse, and with human figure carved on the front. Possibly modern. 
Micmac type. Micmac, Algonkian Indian area. In Provincial Museum, Halifax; 
£ natural size. From Figure d in photograph by Harlan I. Smith, negative, Cat. No. 
27784 in Victoria Memorial Museum, Ottawa, Canada. 
Figure 7. Animal form on front and sides of the bowl of a pipe made of soft grey stone, and 
with the tail on the bottom of the stem. The toes are set off by five incisions on the 
reverse; otherwise the pipe is practically bilaterally symmetrical. Probably modern. 
From, with iron objects, under a copper kettle about 2 feet deep, west of Upper Raw- 
don, Hants co., N.S., and within 10 rods of an old French trail from Shubenacadie to 
Newport. Micmac, Algonkian Indian area. Discovered by John J. Withrow in 
1870. Collected by J. W. Ouseley. Cat. No. 389 in W. J. Almon collection, Provin- 
cial Museum, Halifax; \ natural size. From Figure g in photograph by Harlan I. 
Smith, negative, Cat. No. 27784 in Victoria Memorial Museum, Ottawa, Canada. 
Also illustrated in Figure 96, Plate III, and described on pages 52-55, Piers, Relics, 
1898. Reverse illustrated on page 66, Orr, Report, 1914; and page 66, Laidlaw, 
Effigy, 1914. 
