[263] Mr. Maloney is of the opinion that saggers could just as usefully have served a "groundhog" kiln where they would have enabled the pots to be stacked up to four in height.
[264] See Watkins, Part I, footnote 32.
[265] Op. cit. (footnote 72), pp. 208-220.
[266] It must be stressed that no evidence of any such kiln exists. See also footnote 30.
[267] This material is divided between the colonial archeological collections of the Smithsonian Institution and of Colonial Williamsburg.
[268] I. Noël Hume, "Excavations at Tutter's Neck, James City County in Virginia, 1960-1961," paper 53 in Contributions from the Museum of History and Technology (U.S. National Museum Bulletin 249); Washington: Smithsonian Institution, 1966, fig. 19, nos. 1, 3, and 4.
[269] N.P.S. Collection at Jamestown: Yorktown, no provenance.
[270] Bowl IC.1.18C, Funnels E.R. 140.27A, and National Park Service collection at Jamestown: Yorktown, no provenance.
[271] National Park Service collection at Jamestown: Yorktown, no provenance.
[272] E.R. 157A, C, and G, 27A.