91761. A limestone celt, 6½ inches long, either much weathered since made or else never highly polished, with a large hole drilled in from both sides at the center.—Bartow county, Georgia.
116067. A sandstone celt, with a hole drilled near one corner at the top.—Loudon county, Tennessee.
97764. A large polished piece of steatite, curved from end to end, or claw-shaped. One end is pointed; the other blunt and rounded, with a hole drilled through it.—Caldwell county, North Carolina.
[108] Gillman, H.; in Smithsonian Report for 1873, p. 371.
[109] Primitive Industry, p. 371.
[110] Antiq. of the Southern Indians, p. 30.
[111] Schoolcraft; Indian Tribes, vol. I p. 212.
[112] Schumacher, Paul; Hayden Surv., Bull. 3, 1877, p. 548.
[113] Indian Tribes, vol. I, p. 253.
[114] Contributions to N.A. Eth., vol. III, p. 426.