West Indian Stone-Implements. 133 
for a copy of the paper in question, has beauti- 
fully figured certain specimens discovered by him in the 
f rock-retreat' at Chickies, Pennsylvania. The pottery 
with raised or incised ornamentation from Enmore here 
shown (Nos. 7-1 1 ), is much of the same type as the 
Chickies specimens, except that in a few of the pieces 
(e. g. No 7.), in addition to the incised patterns, a 
further ornament (with which we shall deal presently) 
is luted on. In No. 6, I am not sure whether the ornament 
is simply raised or is luted on ; but if the former it is still 
of higher type than the Chickies specimens in that the 
raised figuring evidently represents no mere un- 
meaning combination of dots and lines but some 
object the nature of which is not easily discernible in so 
fragmentary a specimen. 
One very curious form of ornamentation, represented 
in the Enmore find by one well marked, and several par- 
tially obliterated fragments, though it must probably be 
classed among the incised patterns, is of very peculiar 
character (No. 5). It has evidently been produced by 
impressing on the wet, as yet unbaked, clay certain large 
leaves ; to give an illustration which will be widely re- 
cognized, a very similar pattern might be produced by 
pressing the leaves of the common horse-chestnut on to 
any surface of soft clay. In a volume of the " American 
Antiquarian," p. 78 (but I unfortunately can not say what 
year), Prof. HALDEMAN notices, evidently as something 
new to his great experience, that " I may mention see- 
ing a fragment of clay pottery from Virginia, upon which 
a leaf (probably hickory^ had been impressed before 
burning". This pattern, at Enmore, occurs on some of 
the flat fragments to which allusion has already been 
