[116] Moorehead, l. c., p. 265.
[117] Cf. Rau, Smiths. Rep., 1874, p. 358.
[118] It is similar in form to a point shown by Abbott, l. c., p. 92, fig. 67, found in New Jersey, which he called a knife (p. 90).
[119] Comp. a similar remark in Abbott, l. c., p. 93, concerning the doubtful nature of chipped stones as implements; from the stones in their vicinity they were conjectured to be implements.
[120] Cf. Abbott, l. c., pp. 492 ff., and the same, Report of the Peabody Museum, 1876 to 1879, II, p. 33 ff.
[121] A hide-scraper fastened into a wooden shaft from the Thuswap Indians in British Columbia in the Jessup collection shown by Moorehead, l. c., p. 255, fig. 388.
[122] Pictures of scrapers, see Abbott, l. c., pp. 12 to 138.
[123] Comp. Moorehead, l. c., pp. 146, 170, 308; Abbott, l. c., Chap. VII, pp. 97 to 119.
[124] Smiths. Contrib., l. c., p. 90, fig. 318.
[125] F. W. Putnam, l. c., p. 68, fig. 15.