100 
Triangular depressions are the sole decoration on one rim and they 
are combined with other decorative elements on a few others; also on a 
few shoulder fragments (See Plate II, figure 38, and Plate VI, figure 15) 
and earthenware pipes. 
There are peculiar depressions in the triangular space on the rim 
fragment in Plate VI, figure 10; others are seen on the shoulder fragment 
in Plate II, figure 21. 
Crude, irregular depressions occur on the rim fragments in Plate VI, 
figure 17 (around rectangular plat). 
The lines on the pottery are vertical, diagonal, horizontal, and curved. 
The length of the vertical lines depends either on the width of the 
collar or the width of the rest of the pattern of which they are a com- 
ponent. In some cases they form the sole decoration on the outside and 
inside of the rims (See Plate III, figure 1), and on shoulder fragments (in 
one instance in two rows). They occur in combination with other elements 
on the outside of the rim, being in a row along the top of the collar on 
most of them (See Plate III, figures 6, 14, 16, 23, Plate IV, figures 11 and 
12 (along top), Plate V, figure 1.6 (along top and bottom), Plate VI, ligures 
24, 26 to 29 (along top), Plate VII, figure 6 (along top), and Plate VIII, 
figure 12) ; on the inside of a few rims; and on a few shoulder fragments 
(See Plate II, figure 34, and Plate VI, figure 6). Longer vertical lines, in 
some cases with other decorative elements between two or more of them, 
can be seen in groups of from two to thirteen below the peaked parts of 
the rims (See Plate IV, figure 20, Plate V, figure 9, Plate VI, figures 21 
and 27, Plate VIII, figure 9, and Plate X, figure 7). Vertical lines are also 
seen in the grooves between the ridges of the “ corn-ear ” pattern on a 
few fragments (See Plate V, figures 21 to 24, and 27), and in the wide, 
vertical grooves on some of the angular lips (Plate X, figure 17). Trans- 
verse lines, forming the sole decoration on the flattened edge of some of 
the rims, may be considered here. They occur in combination with other 
elements on the edge of rims of a few other pots. In a few instances there 
are three, six, and eight transverse lines on the peaked part of the rim only. 
The diagonal lines slant to the right and left. Short lines slanting to 
the left are the only decoration on a number of pots including the outside 
(See Plate III, figure 3), inside, and the edges of the rims, and the 
shoulders, a double row in one instance. They occur in combination with 
other elements on rim fragments of many other pots, but mostly at the top 
of the collar (See Plate II, figure 29, Plate III, figures 12, 14, 15, 18, 20, 
Plate IV, figures 6, 7, Plate VI, figure 4, Plate VII, figures 3, 7, 11, and 
Plate VIII, figure 3), on the edge of the rim (Plate II, figure 9), and on 
a few shoulder fragments. Short, diagonal lines slanting to the right occur 
less commonly than those slanting to the left. They form the sole decora- 
tion on the outside, inside, and edge of rim fragments of a few pots; and 
on a few neck and shoulder fragments, in one instance being in a double 
row. They are combined with other decoration on rim fragments of many 
pots (See Plate III, figures 13 and 24) ; on the edge of another rim frag- 
ment; on a neck fragment; and on a few shoulder fragments. 
Short, diagonal lines slanting both to left and right are seen on the 
pot handle on Plate X, figure 16, and on a fragment of an earthenware 
pipe (See Plate XV, figure 36), 
There are short, diagonal, incised lines on a few bone awls. 
