Annual report of the Bureau of ethnology to the secretary of the Smithsonian Institution .. . figure 179 (from London county, Tennessee). Other specimens arefrom eastern Tennessee; central and western North Carolina; Kanawhavalley; Keokuk, Iowa; Miami and Scioto valleys, and central Ohio;eastern, southern, and southwestern Wisconsin; northeastern Arkansas;central and northeastern Kentucky;northwestern Georgia, and Savan-nah; southwestern Illinois; andCoosa valley, Alabama. I). Narrow and thick; up to 6inches long; convex base; edgesstraight to the base, where theyexpand somewhat, giving the im


Annual report of the Bureau of ethnology to the secretary of the Smithsonian Institution .. . figure 179 (from London county, Tennessee). Other specimens arefrom eastern Tennessee; central and western North Carolina; Kanawhavalley; Keokuk, Iowa; Miami and Scioto valleys, and central Ohio;eastern, southern, and southwestern Wisconsin; northeastern Arkansas;central and northeastern Kentucky;northwestern Georgia, and Savan-nah; southwestern Illinois; andCoosa valley, Alabama. I). Narrow and thick; up to 6inches long; convex base; edgesstraight to the base, where theyexpand somewhat, giving the imple-ment a bell shape. The largestspecimen in the lot (figure ISO) hasboth faces polished almost the en-tire length, a feature absent fromall the others. This example is fromCaldwell county, North form is found also in centraland western North Carolina, east-ern Tennessee, northeastern Ken-tucky; Kanawha valley; and north-eastern Arkansas. Few of the flintsfig. flint. occur iu tlie collection except from r Fig. 180. the two localities first mentioned, where they


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Keywords: ., bookcentury1800, bookdecade1890, bookpublisherwashi, bookyear1896