Fig. 213.—Stemmed chipped flint, ovoid.
The type which is shown in [figure 213] is from Dane county, Wisconsin. This group also is widely distributed, being found in southern and southwestern Wisconsin; northeastern Kentucky; southwestern Illinois; Miami and Scioto valleys, Ohio, and the central part of the same state; northeastern, central, and southeastern Arkansas; western North Carolina; and Kanawha valley.
Fig. 214.—Stemmed chipped flint, short blade.
O. Differing from group N only in having longer stems and shorter blades, the latter sometimes less than an inch. Illustrated in [figure 214] (from Kanawha valley). Found also in Scioto valley and in central Ohio; southwestern Wisconsin; southwestern Arkansas; and southwestern Georgia.
P. Convex edges; square shoulders; stem forming a quite regular and continuous curve, slightly expanding in some specimens. The one shown in [figure 215], from Kanawha valley, West Virginia, has the most symmetric outline of any specimen in the entire collection. There are other specimens from Kanawha valley, and also from northeastern Kentucky; Miami valley, Ohio; Washington county, Pennsylvania; eastern and western Tennessee; southwestern Illinois; and southeastern Arkansas.
Fig. 215.—Stemmed chipped flint, symmetric outline.
Fig. 216.—Stemmed chipped flint.