Fig. 161.—Pipe, ornamented.
Fig. 162.—Pipe.
E. Cylindrical bowl, with a square-edged groove around it near the middle, below which the bottom has a somewhat celt like form, with stem hole in one side. A small hole is drilled near the edge at the bottom, probably for the purpose of suspending feathers or other ornaments. The type is represented by [figure 162] (of limestone, from Crawford county, Wisconsin). Pipes of the same form are found also in central Ohio.
Fig. 163.—Pipe, long-stemmed.
F. Round stem from one-half inch to 10 inches long; bowl at extreme end, set on at various angles from nearly a right angle to almost a straight line. Good examples are illustrated in [figure 163] (steatite, from Caldwell county, North Carolina) and 164 (also of steatite, from a mound in Monroe county, Tennessee). The other specimens in the collection are distributed as shown in the table:
| District. | A | B |
|---|---|---|
| Eastern Tennessee | 4 | 7 |
| Caldwell county, North Carolina | 22 | |
| Chester county, South Carolina | 1 | |
| KEY: A = Sandstone. B = Steatite. | ||
Fig. 164.—Pipe, short-stemmed.