104 
Plate VIII, figure 27) . Raised ornamentation like that on two fragments 
of one vessel (Cat. No. VIII-F-116876 and VIII-F-11690) is seen on a pot 
from a site of the same culture on lot 21, con. X, North Burgess tp., Lanark 
co., Ontario (See Boyle 5, Figure 2), but ornamentation like this and other 
figures seen in Plate X, figures 1 to 6, are lacking on pottery from other 
Iroquoian sites. 
In most cases the decoration on the rims, necks, and shoulders of pots 
and a few pipes consists of designs composed of two or more different ele- 
ments, most of the combinations being complex. Some of the simple com- 
binations consist of a row or band of one kind of element (either vertical, 
lenticular, or oblong depressions, or vertical, diagonal, or horizontal lines of 
various lengths), above or below, or both above and below, rows of notches, 
oval depressions, circles, or lines (See Plate II, figure 28, Plate III, figures 
6, 10, 15, and Plate XV, figures 38, 40, and 41). In other combinations of 
from one to four kinds of elements the bands or rows of different elements 
occur twice, and in a few cases three times in the same pattern (See Plate 
III, figures 16 to 18, 24, Plate VIII, figure 27, Plate X, figure 9, and Plate 
XV, figures 36, 43). 
Reticulate designs, formed by combination of either vertical and hori- 
zontal or diagonal and horizontal lines, and diagonal lines slanting in 
opposite directions, some of them crossing each other more or less at right 
angles, occur on a number of pots, in a few cases being the sole decoration 
(See Plate III, figures 21, 29, 32-35, Plate V, figure 9, Plate VIII, figure 25) , 
and on the bone object in Plate XIV, figure 27. There are also groups of 
cross-hatched areas at intervals around several other rims. 
Other complex designs, occurring on a few rims, are seen in Plate IV, 
figures 2, 7, 16, Plate VII, figure 4, Plate VIII, figure 15, and Plate IX, 
figure 3. 
Decoration consisting of groups of diagonal lines, with narrow, rhom- 
boidal, blank spaces between each group and a row of vertical, linear depres- 
sion® or triangular depressions along one side of each space, occurs on a few 
rims and shoulder fragments (See Plate VI, figure 15). A variant of this 
pattern is seen on the fragment in Plate VI, figure 14. 
Other designs, occurring on a number of rims, consist of a series of 
square or rectangular panels, separated from each other by groups of from 
five to ten vertical lines (in a few instances including either a vertical row 
of circles or short horizontal lines), each panel being divided into two tri- 
angular plats by from three to nine lines drawn diagonally from one corner 
to another. The triangular plats have a row of oblong or linear depressions 
either at the narrow ends only (See Plate VI, figures 26-28) ; along both 
sides of the diagonal lines or hypotenuse of each triangular plat (See Plate 
VI, figure 21) ; along the hypotenuse of one of the triangular plats and 
across the narrow side of the opposite plat; along the narrow side of each 
plat and top and bottom of the panel, parts of one of the plats in a few 
cases being filled with horizontal lines (See Plate VI, figures 26, 29) ; along 
the narrow side and hypotenuse in the lower plat and along the narrow 
side and top in the other (See Plate VI, figure 25) ; on both sides of the 
diagonal lines and across the narrow sides of each plat; along the top and 
bottom of the panels and each side of the diagonal lines; or along all sides 
of the plats. A further variant is seen in Plate VI, figure 22. 
