1. Curved-base mound pipe. Mississippi Valley, north of the Ohio and west of Pennsylvania. Also the Great Lakes basin. 2. Heavy bird or animal pipe. South of the Ohio and east of the Mississippi. 3. Tubular pipe. East of the Mississippi, and from central Ohio east. Throughout the Rocky Mountains and the Pacific Coast. 4. Iroquoian clay pipe. New England to New York; Ohio, Michigan, and West Virginia. 5. Iroquoian grotesque bird-pipe. The same region. Also eastern Canada. 6. Iroquoian rectangular pipe. Eastern Canada and New York. 7. Disc or jewsharp pipe. Mississippi Valley, central portion. 8. Biconical pipe. Southern Mississippi Valley, east of the Mississippi and south of the Ohio. Also Ohio and Michigan.
Fig. 430. (S. 1–1.) Earthenware pipe. Found near Lake Champlain. Collection of the University of Vermont.
Fig. 431. (S. 1–1.) Conoidal tube pipe. Collection of G. A. West, Milwaukee, Wisconsin. Sheboygan County, red catlinite.
This table will serve as a beginning, but it is incomplete. Many pipes of the types mentioned by Mr. McGuire are found in other sections than those named by him.
Fig. 432. (S. a little over 1–3.) Found in a mound on Long Island, Tennessee River, Jackson County, Alabama. Collection of J. T. Reeder, Michigan.
The names of some pipes may not be familiar to all of my readers. I therefore repeat Mr. McGuire’s list of fifteen pipe-types, and state opposite each, the numbers of figures illustrating that particular type.
The fifteen types of pipes described by Mr. McGuire are illustrated in this chapter under the following figure numbers:—