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1<br />

BULLETIN OF THE<br />

MASSACHUSETTS ARCHAEOLOGICAL<br />

VOL. <strong>38</strong><br />

SOCIETY<br />

OCTOBER 1977<br />

CONTENts<br />

lNDE X" TO VOLUMES 1- TIIROUGl <strong>38</strong><br />

Page<br />

USERS' GUIDE AND ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS •••••••.••••• 1<br />

AU11IOR INDEX••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••.• 2<br />

TITLE INDEX•••••.••••••••••••••••••.••••••••. 12<br />

SUBJECT INDEX•••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• 25<br />

LIST OF INSTITUTIONAL SUBSCRIBERS •••••••••••• 31<br />

PUBLISHED BY<br />

NO.4<br />

THE MASSACHUSETTS ARCHAEOLOGICAL SOCIETY, Inc.<br />

8RONSON MUSEUM - 8 NORTH MAIN STREET, ATTLE80RO, MASSACHUSETTS - 02703<br />

MEMBER OF THE EASTERN STATES, ARCHEOLOGICAL FEDERATION


VOLUME <strong>38</strong>, NUMBER 4 5<br />

England, 12(3):<strong>38</strong>; Pipes and Rare Products <strong>of</strong> <strong>the</strong> Stone Bowl Industry, 13(1) :13; The<br />

Swan Hold Site, 13(2):1; Trade Tomahawks, 13(3):23; Comments on Culture Growth and<br />

Change in Eastern <strong>Massachusetts</strong> by Ripley P. Bullen, 13(3) :28; Ceramics <strong>of</strong> <strong>the</strong> "Early<br />

Period", 13(3):29; Twin Rivers: Four-Culture Sequence at a Rhode Island Site, 14(1):1;<br />

Museum Displays, 14(3):92; Interpretation <strong>of</strong> <strong>the</strong> Evidence, 14(3) :98; A Proposed Artifact<br />

Classification, 15(1):9; Agricultural Tools and Techniques <strong>of</strong> <strong>the</strong> <strong>No</strong>r<strong>the</strong>ast,<br />

15(3):41; Rhode Island Prehistory at <strong>the</strong> Green Point Site, 15(4) :65; <strong>Massachusetts</strong><br />

Fluted Points, 16(1):2; Hammersmith Chronology at Saugus. 16(3) :41; Suggested Classification<br />

<strong>of</strong> Atlatl Weights, 17(2):25; The Stone Bowl Industry, Its Importance as a<br />

Culture Diagnostic, 17(4):74; Sweet-Meadow Brook: A Pottery Site in Rhode Island,<br />

18(1) :1; The Westford Indian Rock, 21(2) :21; Did Lafitau Draw What He Saw?, 21(3-4):<br />

<strong>38</strong>; Ceramic Development Stages With Some Contemporaneous Lithic Traits, 22(1) :9;<br />

Editorial on Excavation Methods, 22(1) :16; Domestic Evidence at Steatite Quarries,<br />

22(3-4) :49; Movement <strong>of</strong> Prehistoric Peoples in <strong>the</strong> <strong>No</strong>r<strong>the</strong>ast, 22(3-4) :62; Projectile<br />

Points and Their Cultural Signific.ance, 23( 1) :5; Was <strong>the</strong> Guida Site <strong>the</strong> Center <strong>of</strong><br />

Ceramic Influence? (Editorial) ,23(1):20; Woodworking: An Important Industry, 23(3-4):<br />

29; Rattlesnake Rock Shelter, 24(1):1; Locust Spring Site: Its Occupational Activities,<br />

24(1):6; Correlation <strong>of</strong> Seven Sites in <strong>the</strong> Narragansett Bay Drainage, 24(3-4):<br />

37; Methods <strong>of</strong> Excavating and Recording (Editorial), 24(3-4):68; Classification <strong>of</strong><br />

Stone Implements <strong>of</strong> <strong>the</strong> <strong>No</strong>r<strong>the</strong>ast, 25(1)1; Contributions to <strong>the</strong> Advance <strong>of</strong> New<br />

England Archaeology, 25(3-4) :50; The Leaf Knife Complex, 26(1):10; Two Duxbury Pots,<br />

26(2):30; A Birdstone Recovery in Rhode Island, 26(3-4):39; Significant Ceramic<br />

Pipe Recoveries, 26(3-4) :49; The Grooved Ax: An Important Diagnostic, 27(1):5;Chronology<br />

<strong>of</strong> Some Kaolin Pipe Types, 27(1) :14; The Horne Hill Soapstone Quarry, 27(2):<br />

17; Three Iroquois Pots from New Jersey, 27(2) :30; Ceremonial and Domestic Products<br />

<strong>of</strong> Aboriginal New England, 27(3-4) :33; <strong>No</strong>table Upper Cape Cod Surface Recoveries,<br />

28(1) :1; Cache <strong>of</strong> Engraved Pebbles from New Brunswick, 28(1):15;0aklawn Quarry:<br />

Stone Bowl and Pipe Making, 29(1):1; How Do You Know Where to Dig? (Editorial),<br />

29(1) :16; Archaic Discoveries at Flat River, 29(2) :17; A Case For an Early Archaic<br />

in New England, 29(3-4) :53; Stone Bowl-Making at <strong>the</strong> Westfield Quarry, 30(1) :6;<br />

Hafting Atlatl Weights, 30(2) :15; The Wilbraham Stone Bowl Quarry, 30(3-4) :9;<br />

Parallel Stem Point Comparison, 30(3-4):24; A Stone Pipe from Plymouth, 30(3-4) :26;<br />

Pottery Restoration Described, 30(3-4) :29; Aboriginal Grinding Equipment, 31(1-2):<br />

19; An unusual Pestle Find, 31(1-2):26:An Ulu Recovery at Swan Hold, 31(1-2) :27;<br />

The Function <strong>of</strong> Pecking: How Used (Editorial), 31(1-2) :30; New England Tomahawks,<br />

31(3-4):10; Discovery <strong>of</strong> Fertilizer in Maize CUltivation, 31(3-4) :23; Recent Boats<br />

Site Early Archaic Recoveries, 31(3-4) :29; The Purpose <strong>of</strong> Excavating (Editorial),<br />

31(3-4) :32; A Rare Stone Pipe from Rhode Island, 32(1-2) :23; Rewards for Persistent<br />

Hunting, 32(1-2) :29; Who Were <strong>the</strong> Builders? (Editorial), 32(1-2) :31; Ragged Mountain<br />

Shelter Quarry, 32(3-4) :9; Some Sources <strong>of</strong> New England Flints, 32(3-4):23; Early<br />

Archaics at Bluff Site, 33(1-2) :l;Bone Implements: How They Were Used, 33(1-2):12;<br />

Recommended Methods for Excavating a Site, 33(1-2):29;Maine Archaic Complex, 33(3-4):<br />

10; Some Aboriginal Stone Works in New England, 33(3-4) :18; Eden Points in <strong>Massachusetts</strong>,<br />

33(3-4) :29; Bull Brook: A Paleo Complex Site, 34(1-2) :1; Projectile Imports:<br />

How to Recognize Them, 34(1-2) :16; Restoring Artifacts, 34(1-2) :29; Hafting Stone<br />

Implements, 34(3-4):1; Abodes <strong>of</strong> Four Aboriginal Periods, 34(3-4) :15; Metal Cutouts<br />

<strong>of</strong> <strong>the</strong> <strong>No</strong>r<strong>the</strong>ast, 34(3-4) :24; Sitting Bull: The Patriot, 34(3-4) :30; Comparative<br />

Study <strong>of</strong> Hoe and Spade Blades, 35(1-2) :1; The Whaletail Atlatl Weight, 35(1-2) :14;<br />

Fort Hill Field Site, 35(1-2) :17; Figured Art: Its Presence in Stone Age New England;<br />

35(1-2) :20; Otstungo Effigy Ceramic Pipes, 35(1-2) :28; Tangible and Intangible Evidence,<br />

35(1-2):31; A Study <strong>of</strong> Projectile Points, 35(3-4) :1; Two Indian Burials in<br />

<strong>No</strong>rth Middleboro, 35(3-4) :14; Mary Rowlandson and Indian Behavior, 35(3-4) :25;<br />

Following <strong>the</strong> Trail <strong>of</strong> Early Man (Editorial), 35(3-4) :31; Discoveries at Wilcox<br />

Brook Site, 36(1-2):1; The Making <strong>of</strong> Wing Atlatl Weights, 36(1-2) :19; Corn Mills:<br />

A Mountaintop Example, 36(1-2) :22; A Pottery Analysis, 36(1-2) :25; Effigy Carvings,<br />

36(1-2):28; The Diagnostic Stone Bowl Industry, 36(3-4) :1; Magic Stones and Shamans,<br />

36(3-4) :10; Eating Practices in Aboriginal New England, 36(3-4) :21; A Hockamock<br />

Hearth Discovery, 36(3-4) :28; Significant Plummet Recoveries, 36(3-4):31; A


6 THE MASSACHUSETTS ARCHAEOLOGICAL SOCIETY BULLETIN<br />

Review <strong>of</strong> Dugout-Making, 37(1-2):1; Division <strong>of</strong> Labor: <strong>Archaeological</strong> Discoveries,<br />

37(1-2) :6; Three Pembroke Burial Knives, 37(1-2) :12; Procurement and Use <strong>of</strong> Bark,<br />

37(1-2):15; The Cracked Rock Shelter,37(1-2) :20; An Inquiry into <strong>the</strong> Contact Stage,<br />

37(1-2) :22; Sharpening Stones, 37(1-2) :28; A Grooved Ax Study, 37(1-2) :30; A Rare<br />

Pipe Discovery, 37(3-4):42; New Discoveries at Swan Hold, 37(3-4) :49; What Is It?,<br />

<strong>38</strong>( 1-2) :30<br />

Fowler, William S. and Hutchins, Francis, Once in a Life Time, 17(1):13<br />

Fowler, William S. and Lu<strong>the</strong>r, Herbert A., Culture Sequence at <strong>the</strong> Potter Pond Site,<br />

ll( 4) :91<br />

Fowler, William S. and Welt, Jess W., Hunting Fossils Produces a Cache <strong>of</strong> Blades,<br />

17(1):6; A Significant Find, 17(1):9<br />

Fowler, William S., see Dunn, Gerald C.<br />

Franke, Walter E., A Unique Find, 11(2):17<br />

Fulcher, L. Richard, Stone Bowls on Cape Cod, 36(1-2) :30<br />

Gahan, Laurence K., The Nipmucks and Their Territory, 2(4) :2; Finds at an Aurignacian<br />

Station in Detmold, Germany, 8(2) :24; Methods <strong>of</strong> Translating Indian Place Names,<br />

21(3-4) :46; Fea<strong>the</strong>rs, 22(2) :30; Gleanings from <strong>the</strong> Indian Languages, 22(3-4) :65<br />

Glamm. Arthur C. , Jr., see Johannesson, Philip W.<br />

Glynn, Frank, Book Review: FieZd ArchaeoZogy by R.J.C. Atkinson, 15(1) :21<br />

Gookin, Warner F., The Pilgrims as Archaeologists, 11(2) :19; Metsoo'onk (Experience<br />

Mayhew's Word for Victuals), 12(4) :58; Indian Deeds on <strong>the</strong> Vineyard, 13(2) :6;<br />

Massasoit's Domain: Is "Wampanoag" <strong>the</strong> Correct Designation?, 20(1):12<br />

Gramly, Richard Michael, The Mt. Jasper Lithic Source Area, <strong>38</strong>(3) :48<br />

Graybill, Guy, A Nation-Wide Atlatl Weight Survey, 35(3-4):8<br />

Greene, William L., A Grave in Middleboro, 3(3) :35; Ceramic Pot from <strong>the</strong> Indian Hill<br />

Site, 22(3-4):42<br />

H<br />

Hadlock, Wendell S. , Eight Platform or "Monitor" Pipes in <strong>the</strong> Peabody Museum, Salem,<br />

<strong>Massachusetts</strong>, 8(4):49; A Cache from Ipswich, 9(4) :73; Three Contact Burials from<br />

Eastern <strong>Massachusetts</strong>, 10(3):63; see Butler, Eva L.; see Kingsbury, Isaac W.<br />

Hallett, Leaman F., News <strong>of</strong> <strong>the</strong> Chapters, 1(3) :7; Cultural Traits <strong>of</strong> <strong>the</strong> Sou<strong>the</strong>rn New<br />

England Indians, 15(4) :59; Indian Games, 16(2) :25; Indian Trails and Their Importance<br />

to <strong>the</strong> Early Settlers, 17(3) :41; Medicine and Pharmacy <strong>of</strong> <strong>the</strong> New England Indians,<br />

17(3):46; The Colonial Invasion <strong>of</strong> Hereditary Lands, 20(3):34<br />

Harp, Elmer, Jr. , Prehistoric Hunters <strong>of</strong> Newfoundland---Labrador and Their Relationship<br />

to New England Archaeology, 18(4) :65<br />

Hartshorn, Joseph H., Geology and Archaeology: Partnership with Pr<strong>of</strong>it, 12(3) :41<br />

Hatch, Richard W., Deerfield <strong>Archaeological</strong> Display, 31(3-4):8<br />

Haviland, William A., Gorgets: Ornamental or Utilitarian?, 31(3-4) :30; Comments,<br />

32( 1-2) : 33<br />

Heino, Rei, The Cohannet Line, 24(2) :35<br />

Historical Research Committee, Original Narrative Reprints, #1, 1(3) :30; #2, 1(4) :11;<br />

#3,2(1):23; #4, 3(3):36; #5, 4(4):57; #6, 8(2) :17, #7,9(1):9<br />

H<strong>of</strong>fmann, Arthur M. ,The Results <strong>of</strong> Thorough Excavation and Careful Study, 1(4) :23; A<br />

Stone Pavement at Andover, <strong>Massachusetts</strong>, 3(2) :25; A Strange Deposit <strong>of</strong> Spearpoints,<br />

5(1):11; see Bullen, Ripley P.<br />

Holmes, Russell E., A Ceramic Pot from <strong>the</strong> Swan Hold II Site, 24(3-4):51<br />

Hoornbeek, Billie ,and Bolian, Charles B. , Portable Structures and Winter Archaeology,<br />

<strong>38</strong>(1-2) :20<br />

Hornblower, Henry,II, The Status <strong>of</strong> Colonial Archaeology in <strong>Massachusetts</strong> in 1941,<br />

4(3) : 41<br />

Howe, Gudrun B. and Howe, Henry F., Pebble Beach Workshops <strong>of</strong> <strong>the</strong> South Shore, 8(3):44<br />

Howe, Henry F., The Sources <strong>of</strong> New England History Prior to 1620, 3( 2) :19; A Thumb Nail<br />

G


VOLUME <strong>38</strong>, NUMBER 4 7<br />

Sketch <strong>of</strong> King Philip's War: Excerpts from a book in preparation, 9(4) :76; Archaeology<br />

<strong>of</strong> <strong>the</strong> Lower <strong>No</strong>rth River Valley, lO(2) :39; see Howe, Gudrun B.<br />

Howell, David H., see Bullen, Ripley P.<br />

Howes, William J., The Importance <strong>of</strong> <strong>the</strong> Connecticut Valley Territory <strong>of</strong> Western <strong>Massachusetts</strong><br />

to <strong>the</strong> Indian, Its Resources and <strong>the</strong> Distribution <strong>of</strong> Its Commodities<br />

Throughout All <strong>of</strong> Sou<strong>the</strong>rn England, 1(4) :4; Aboriginal New England Pottery, 5(1) :1;<br />

A Trading Center for Local Products Found on <strong>the</strong> Hoccanum Road in <strong>the</strong> Town <strong>of</strong> Hadley,<br />

<strong>Massachusetts</strong>, 3(4):58; The Problematical Thin Shell Stone Tubes, 3(2) :11; Indian<br />

Soapstone Quarries <strong>of</strong> Western <strong>Massachusetts</strong>, 5(4) :49; Why Use <strong>the</strong> Metric System <strong>of</strong><br />

Measurements for <strong>Archaeological</strong> Purposes?,6(3):42; Artifacts Found on <strong>the</strong> Judd Tract<br />

in South Hadley, Mass., 7(4) :68; Aboriginal New England Pottery (First Installment),<br />

15(2) :23; Aboriginal New England Pottery (Second Installment), 15(4) :81; Aboriginal<br />

New England Pottery (Third Installment), 16(1) :9; Aboriginal New England Pottery<br />

(Fourth Installment), 17(2) :30; Aboriginal New England Pottery (Fifth Installment),<br />

17(3) :52; Guida Farm Pottery (Sixth Installment) 21(2) :27;Maine Coast Pottery (Seventh<br />

Installment), 21(3-4) :54; Iroquoian---Mohawk Pottery (Eight Installment)<br />

21(3-4) :56; Pottery Size Scale, 21(3-4) :61; New England Ceramic Pipes (Ninth and<br />

Final Installment), 22(1):1<br />

Hunt, Edward E., Jr., see Vidal, Federico S.<br />

Huntington, E.G., Six Specialized Knives, 17(1) :15; Preliminary Report on <strong>the</strong> Lagoon<br />

Pond Site, 18(3):59; An Historical Basis for Vinland, 18(3) :61; A Cache <strong>of</strong> Artifacts<br />

from Martha's Vineyard, 23(3-4) :50;<br />

Hutchins, Francis, see Fowler, William S.<br />

J<br />

Jeppson,Britta D., A Study <strong>of</strong> Cordage and Rolled Copper Beads, Burial #6, Titicut<br />

Site, 25(2):37<br />

Johannesson, Philip W. and Glamm, Arthur C., Jr., The Seman Site: A New York State Excavation,26(3-4):44<br />

Johnson, Frederick, The Annual Meeting <strong>of</strong> <strong>the</strong> Eastern States <strong>Archaeological</strong> Federation,<br />

2(2) :3; The Hemenway Site, M-42-42, Eastham, <strong>Massachusetts</strong>, 3(3) :27; An Indian<br />

Grave in Chatham, <strong>Massachusetts</strong>, 5(2):26; The Dolmen on Martha's Vineyard, 6(2):29;<br />

Radiocarbon Dating: a Brief Appraisal, l8(2) :26<br />

Johnson, George K., Two Barnstable Pots, 23(3-4) :45<br />

Jones, Howard A., A Cache from Ipswich: II. Two Letters, 10(2) :46<br />

Jordan, Douglas F., Adena and Block-End Tubes in <strong>the</strong> <strong>No</strong>r<strong>the</strong>ast, 20(4) :49<br />

Kaeser, Edward J., A Rock Shelter at <strong>the</strong> Stony Point Battle Field Site, 22(3-4) :56;<br />

A Dated Pipe from Manhattan Island, New York, 24(3-4) :53<br />

Keighley, Stephen, The Eagle Dam Site, Wrentham, Mass. ,12(4) :53<br />

Keith, Barker D., An Adena-Connected Burial Site, 27(1):1<br />

Kevitt, Chester B., Aboriginal Dugout Discovered at Weymouth, 30(1):1<br />

Kingsbury, Isaac W. ,M'Teoulin and Two Versions <strong>of</strong> a Passamaquoddy Legend, 17(1):1<br />

Kingsbury, Isaac W. and Hadlock, Wendell W., An Early Occupation Site, Eastport,<br />

Maine, 12(2): 22<br />

Kremp, Frank, The Coburn Site: A Burial Complex on Cape Cod, 22(3-4) :33<br />

Landon, Melvin V., Proposed Method <strong>of</strong> Dating Tool Marks in Stone, 16(2) :<strong>38</strong>; Dimensional<br />

Determination from Potsherds, 20(3):46; Preliminary Report on <strong>the</strong> Curvature <strong>of</strong><br />

Pottery, 24(3-4) :64<br />

Lenik, Edward J., The Arrowsic Island Petroglyph, 37(3-4) :47<br />

Lee, Thomas E., A Point Peninsula Site, Manitoulin Island, Lake Huron, 26(2) :19<br />

Lemire, Raymond, South Bay Quartzite Quarry, 36(3-4) :17<br />

Lohr, Edison P., Moving Indian Rock, 30(3-4) :28<br />

K<br />

L


VOLUME <strong>38</strong>, NUMBER 4 9<br />

Parker, Arthur C., Making Mockery <strong>of</strong> Archaeology, 1(3):3<br />

Parker, Richard, The Brook Meadow Site, 35(1-2):9<br />

Petzold, Arthur, The Eaton Site: A Dugout Workshop, 22(3-4) :46; The Indian Roger Site,<br />

24(3-4):45<br />

Phelps, Mason M., The South Swansea Burials, 8(3) :33; Indians <strong>of</strong> Old Brookfield:<br />

Excerpts from History <strong>of</strong> <strong>No</strong>rth Brookfield by Hosiah H. Temple 1887,9(4) :80; Titicut<br />

Indian Burials -- A Soliloquy, 11(2):21<br />

Pohl, Frederick J., Comments on <strong>the</strong> Follins Pond Report, 14(4) :105; The Ship's Shoring<br />

at Follins Pond, 16(3):53; Can <strong>the</strong> Ship's Shoring at Follins Pond be Radiocarbon<br />

Dated?, 17(3) :49; Fur<strong>the</strong>r Comments on Mooring Holes, 20(1) :15; A <strong>No</strong>va Scotia Project,<br />

20(3):39; Fur<strong>the</strong>r Pro<strong>of</strong> <strong>of</strong> Vikings at Follins Pond, Cape Cod, 21(3-4) :48; Riddle<br />

<strong>of</strong> <strong>the</strong> Stone Beehives, 25(3-4) :72; Comments on Tangible and Intangible Evidence,<br />

35(3-4) :33<br />

Powell, Bernard W., An Osseous Find at Follins Pond, 18(2) :32; The Mooring Hole Problem<br />

in Long Island Sound, 19(2) :31; A Ceramic Find at Hunting Ridge, Connecticut,<br />

20(3):42; Some Connecticut Burials, 23(2) :26; Bitter Rock Shelter: A Stratified<br />

Connecticut Site, 26(3-4):53; A Probable Fake Pre-Columbian Marker, 28(1) :10; An<br />

<strong>Archaeological</strong> Traverse <strong>of</strong> Sandy Neck, 28(2) :27<br />

Pring, Martin, Voyage <strong>of</strong> Martin Pring, 1603 (Original Narrative Reprint #3), 2(1) :23<br />

Raymond, Percy E., Latten Spoons from <strong>the</strong> Old Colony, 11(1):6<br />

Red Thunder Cloud, Chief (Carlos A.H. Westez), A Study <strong>of</strong> <strong>the</strong> Long Island Indian Problem,<br />

5(2):17<br />

Regensburg, R.A., The Savich Farm Site: A Preliminary Report, 32(1-2) :20<br />

Ritchie, William A., Comments on Bullen's Review,The Pre-Iroquoian Occupations <strong>of</strong> New<br />

York State, 6(3):43; The Paleo-Indian in <strong>the</strong> <strong>No</strong>r<strong>the</strong>ast, 19(2) :21<br />

Rivard, Jean-Jacques, Technical Illustration Applied to Archaeology, 25(2) :44<br />

Roach, Rodney W., A Cremation Burial Complex in Carver, 32(3-4):1<br />

Robbins, Maurice, To <strong>the</strong> Members <strong>of</strong> <strong>the</strong> <strong>Massachusetts</strong> <strong>Archaeological</strong> <strong>Society</strong>, 1(1):2<br />

Our Survey, 1(1) :7; Report <strong>of</strong> <strong>the</strong> Sou<strong>the</strong>rn Group <strong>of</strong> <strong>the</strong> <strong>Massachusetts</strong> <strong>Archaeological</strong><br />

<strong>Society</strong>, 1(2):9 Classification <strong>of</strong> <strong>the</strong> Aboriginal Cultures in <strong>the</strong> State <strong>of</strong> New York,<br />

1(2):30; <strong>Archaeological</strong> Reconnaissance in <strong>the</strong> Marion Region during 1942,4(2) :17;<br />

Prologue to New England by Henry F. Howe (Book Review), 4(4) :64; Comments on Interpreting<br />

<strong>the</strong> Past, 5(3) :40; It Pays to be Careful, 7(2) :42; A Brief Review <strong>of</strong> <strong>the</strong><br />

Progress <strong>of</strong> <strong>the</strong> <strong>Massachusetts</strong> <strong>Archaeological</strong> <strong>Society</strong>, 10(3) :5; An Indian Burial at<br />

Warwick, Rhode Island, 11(1):1; Historical Approach to Titicut, 11(3) :48; Some<br />

Evidence <strong>of</strong> <strong>the</strong> Use <strong>of</strong> Red Ochre into Historic Times, 17(2) :18; An Indian Burial at<br />

Gardner's Neck, 17(2) :22; Indians <strong>of</strong> <strong>the</strong> Old Colony: Their Relation With and Their<br />

Contributions to <strong>the</strong> Settlement <strong>of</strong> <strong>the</strong> Area, 17(4) :59; Some Indian Burials from<br />

Sou<strong>the</strong>astern <strong>Massachusetts</strong> (Part 1),20(2):17; Some Indian Burials from Sou<strong>the</strong>astern<br />

<strong>Massachusetts</strong>. Part 2 - The Wapanucket Burials, 20(4) :61; Recovery <strong>of</strong> an Ax or<br />

Mace in its Original Haft, 21(3-4) :62; Secondary Cremation Burial <strong>No</strong>.2, The Hawes<br />

Site, 24(2):30; A Porpoise Effigy, 24(3-4) :49; The Titicut Site, 28(3-4) :33; A<br />

Brass Kettle Recovery at Corn Hill, 29(3-4) :62; Some Early House Floors, 32(1-2) :1;<br />

In Memoriam: Jesse Brewer 1888-1971,33(3-4):28; In Appreciation: William S. Fowler,<br />

37(3-4) :35; A Unique Artifact from Cape Cod, 37(3-4) :45; A Unique Artifact from<br />

Raynham, Mass. <strong>38</strong>(1-2):12<br />

Robbins, Maurice and Bullen, Ripley P., An Indian Burial at South Dartmouth, 6(3):44<br />

Robbins, Maurice,and Staples, Arthur, and Staples,Arnold, Sweet's Knoll, 16(4) :61<br />

Robinson, John, Pre-Historic Relics from Beverly, 8(2) :22<br />

Roop, Stanley M., Mill River: An Archaic Upland Site, 24(2) :21<br />

Rose, Edward F., Five Unusual Caches at <strong>the</strong> Boats Site, 14(4) :109; The Boats Site,<br />

Excavation <strong>No</strong>.2, 26(3-4):33<br />

Rosser, John, A New Challenge for <strong>Massachusetts</strong> Archaeology, <strong>38</strong>(1-2):1<br />

Rouse, Irving, Styles <strong>of</strong> Pottery in Connecticut, 7(1):1<br />

Rowe, John H. ,Archaeology and History in Eastern Maine, 2(4) :7; Excavations in <strong>the</strong><br />

R


VOLUME <strong>38</strong>, NUMBER 4 11<br />

Stockley, Bernard H., The Car-Tracks Site, Wareham, 23(3-4) :41; Some Unusual Artifacts<br />

from Ram Pasture I, Nantucket, Mass., 25(3-4):70; A Late Woodland Burial on Martha's<br />

Vineyard, 31(1-2) :30<br />

Stoddard, Theodore L., Giants' Kettles, Indian Mortars, Potholes, and Glacial Mills,<br />

14( 4) :112<br />

Strauss, Alan, Lithic Analysis <strong>of</strong> a MUdstone/ I Argillite" Workshop: The Wills Hill Site,<br />

<strong>38</strong>(1-2) :22<br />

Studley, Irving, Camp Sites in Sou<strong>the</strong>astern <strong>Massachusetts</strong>, 6(3) :36<br />

Taylor, William B., Seaver Farm Red Paint Burials, 31(3-4)1; A Boatstone From Fort<br />

Hill, 33(1-2):32; Seaver Farm Cremation Burials, 33(3-4):1; Seaver Farm Salvage<br />

Excavation, 34(1-2):24; An Engraved Wing Atlatl Weight, 36(1-2) :16; A Bifurcated<br />

Point Concentration, 37(3-4) :36; The Fort Hill Bluff Site, <strong>38</strong>(1-2):7<br />

Thomas, Walter, Jr., Report <strong>of</strong> a Lodge Floor, Rochester Site -- Test 4, 21(2) :25<br />

Torrey, Howard, Evidence <strong>of</strong> Typological Stratigraphy at Seth's Swamp, Wellfleet,<br />

<strong>Massachusetts</strong>, 7(3):50; An Unusual Stone Blade from Wellfleet, <strong>Massachusetts</strong>,<br />

7(4) :70; Indian Rocks <strong>of</strong> Cape Cod, l4(special) :17<br />

Torrey, Howard and Bullen, Ripley, P., A Burial Pit at Taylor Hill, Wellfleet, Mass.<br />

7(4) :65<br />

Tuck, James A., A Possible Red Paint Grave from Martha's Vineyard, 33(3-4):32<br />

Tufts, Florence M., Warren King Moorehead Chapter, 10(3) :53<br />

Tyzzer, Ernest E., An Experimental study <strong>of</strong> <strong>the</strong> Manufacture <strong>of</strong> Articles <strong>of</strong> Bone and<br />

Antler, 19(3):37<br />

V<br />

Vacaro, Joseph, see Eldridge, William<br />

Verrazano, Giovanni da, Sailors' Narratives <strong>of</strong> Voyages Along <strong>the</strong> New England Coast<br />

1524-1624 (Original Narrative Reprint #1),1(3) :30<br />

Vidal, Federico S., Slade, Charles I. and Hunt, Edward E. Jr., Four Indian Burials at<br />

Hyannis, <strong>Massachusetts</strong>, 12(1):8<br />

Viera, Donald J., A Kingston Pot, 23(2) :32<br />

Vossberg, Walter A. , Summary <strong>of</strong> a Cultural Area; Long Island, New York, 13(2) :10; A<br />

Message from <strong>the</strong> President, 18(2) :25; Comments on a Shawsheen River Site, 20(3) :37<br />

Vossberg, Walter A. and Mansfield J. Alfred, A Preliminary Report <strong>of</strong> <strong>the</strong> Concord River<br />

Site at Billerica, Mass., 16(2) :20<br />

W<br />

Waddicor, Arthur, Church Brook Rock Shelter #1, 30(2) :10<br />

Waddicor, Arthur and Mitchell. Morris, Furnace Hill Brook Site: A Salvage Dig, 30(2):4<br />

Walcott, Charles F. ,Locally Available Stone: First Choice for Artifact Manufacture,<br />

15(2) :37; Significance <strong>of</strong> Wear on Chipped Implements, 27(1) :12<br />

Waters, Joseph H., How Early Post-Wisconsin Man Came to New England, 23(2):21<br />

Welt, Jess W., see Fowler, William S.<br />

Westez, Carlos A.H. (Chief Red Thunder Cloud), An Ethnological IntrOduction to <strong>the</strong><br />

Long Island Indians, 6(3) :39<br />

Whiting, Adrian P., The Archaeologist (A Poem), 1(4) :2; Old Agawam Path, 7(3) :62;<br />

Found and Lost (A Poem), 7(4) :80; An Ancient Blade (A Poem), 10(2) :48; Patackosi<br />

(A Poem), 18(4):78<br />

Whiting, William W., Digging at Indian Work Shops Near Plymouth, Mass., 4( 1) :13; A<br />

Cache <strong>of</strong> Rubbing Stones, 5(2) :28; A Pot from <strong>No</strong>ok Farm Camp Site, Plymouth, Mass.,<br />

10(2) :44; The Burgess Pasture Site, 11(1):2<br />

Whiting, W.W. and Brewer, Jesse, Pits at <strong>the</strong> <strong>No</strong>ok Farm Camp Site, 7(2) :43<br />

Wilder, Janet, History in Review--1964, 25(3-4) :46<br />

Williams, William T., Discovery <strong>of</strong> 52 Cache Blades in Squantum, 24(3-4) :56<br />

Winter, Eugene, The Meaning <strong>of</strong> Membership, 21(1) :15<br />

Wood, William, New England's Prospect Original Narrative Reprint #6), 8(2) :17<br />

T


VOLUME <strong>38</strong>, NUMBER 4<br />

Black Lucy's Garden, Adelaide Bullen and Ripley P. Bullen, 6(2) :17<br />

Boats Site, Excavation <strong>No</strong>.2, The, Edward F. Rose, 26(3-4) :33<br />

Boatstone from Fort Hill, A, William B. Taylor, 33(1-2):32<br />

Bone Implements: How They Were Used, William S. Fowler, 33(1-2) :12<br />

Bradley Site on <strong>the</strong> Penobscot, The, Guy Mellgren, 21(3-4) :43<br />

Brass Kettle Recovery at Corn Hill, Cape Cod, A, Maurice Robbins 29(3-4) :62<br />

Bridgewater Stone, The, Arthur Alvin, 14(2) :73<br />

Brief Review <strong>of</strong> <strong>the</strong> Progress <strong>of</strong> <strong>the</strong> <strong>Massachusetts</strong> <strong>Archaeological</strong> <strong>Society</strong>, A, Maurice<br />

Robbins, 10(3):50<br />

Bronson Museum, The, Anon., 14(3) :89<br />

Brook Meadow Site, Richard Parker, 35(1-2):9<br />

Brooks, Edward, (Obituary), Anon., 18( 3) :64<br />

Bull Brook: A Paleo Complex Site, William S. Fowler, 34(1-2):1<br />

Bull Brook Site, Ipswich, Mass., The, William Eldridge and Joseph Vacaro, 13(4) :39<br />

Bungay River Site, A, George H. Barton, 28(1):9<br />

Burgess Pasture Site, The, W.W. Whiting, 11(1):2<br />

Burial Pit at Taylor Hill, Wellfleet, Mass., A, Howard Torrey and Ripley P. Bullen,<br />

7(4) :65<br />

C<br />

Cache Corner at Satucket, Raymond J. Seamans, 10(4) :94<br />

Cache from Ipswich, A, Wendell S. Hadlock, 9(4) :73<br />

Cache from Ipswich: II. Two Letters, A, Howard A. Jones, 10(2) :46<br />

Cache <strong>of</strong> Artifacts from Martha's Vineyard, A, E.G. Huntington, 23(3-4):50<br />

Cache <strong>of</strong> Bone Implements, A, Donald G. Scothorne, 31(1-2):28<br />

Cache <strong>of</strong> Engraved Pebbles from New Brunswick, William S. Fowler, 28(1) :15<br />

Cache <strong>of</strong> Rubbing Stones, A, W.W. Whiting, 5(2) :28<br />

Camp Sites in Sou<strong>the</strong>astern <strong>Massachusetts</strong>, Irving Studley, 6(3):36<br />

Camp Sites Near Plymouth, Mass. ,Jesse Brewer, 3(4) :55<br />

Can <strong>the</strong> Ship's Shoring at Follins Pond Be Radiocarbon Dated?, Frederick J. Pohl,<br />

n( 3) :49<br />

Cape Cod Canal Pot, A, Jesse Brewer, 23(1) :18<br />

Caribou Indians <strong>of</strong> <strong>the</strong> Quebec-Labrador Peninsula, John T. Mc.Gee, 25(2) :<strong>38</strong><br />

Car-Tracks Site, Wareham, The, Bernard H. Stockley, 23(3-4) :41<br />

Case for and Early Archaic in New England, A, William S. Fowler, 29(3-4) :53<br />

Cattail Creek Fluting Tradition and Its Complex-Determining Lithic Debris, The, Floyd<br />

Painter, 34(1-2):6<br />

Ceramic Design Elements <strong>of</strong> <strong>Massachusetts</strong>, William S. Fowler, 8(1):1<br />

Ceramic Development With Some Contemporaneous Lithic Traits, William S. Fowler, 22(1):9<br />

Ceramic Find at Hunting Ridge, Connecticut, A, Bernard W. Powell, 20(3) :42<br />

Ceramic Pot Discovery in Coastal Connecticut, Clarence Donath, Jr., 34(3-4) :13<br />

Ceramic Pot from <strong>the</strong> Indian Hill Site, William L. Greene, 22(3-4 ) :42<br />

Ceramic Pot from <strong>the</strong> Swan Hold II Site, A, Russell E. Holmes, 24(3-4) :51<br />

Ceramic Pot Recovery at Oak Island <strong>No</strong>.2, A, Donald Scothorne and Nancy Scothorne,<br />

32(3-4) :19<br />

Ceramics <strong>of</strong> <strong>the</strong> "Early Period", William S. Fowler, 13(3) :29<br />

Ceremonial and Domestic Products <strong>of</strong> Aboriginal New England, William S. Fowler,<br />

27( 3-4) :33<br />

Certain Small TriangUlar Arrow Points, Ripley P. Bullen, 12(4) :64<br />

Champlain's Account <strong>of</strong> <strong>the</strong> New England Coasts (Original Narrative Reprints, #4),<br />

Samuel de Champlain, 3(3) :36<br />

Channeled Gouge: An Early Archaic Diagnostic, The, Edward G. Bielski, 25(2) :35<br />

Charles C. Willoughby Chapter, The, Benjamin L. Smith,10(3) :56<br />

Charter Members (List <strong>of</strong>), Anon., 25(3-4) :45<br />

Chemical Analysis <strong>of</strong> Residue from Indian Hill Ceramic Pot, J.J. Clancy, 22(3-4):44<br />

Chips, Arthur George Smith, 22(3-4) :68<br />

Chronology and Classification <strong>of</strong> Connecticut Valley Projectile Points, William S.<br />

Fowler, 6(4) :53<br />

13


14 THE MASSACHUSETTS ARCHAEOLOGICAL SOCIETY BULLETIN<br />

Chronology <strong>of</strong> Some Kaolin Pipe Types, William S. Fowler, 27(1):14<br />

Church Brook Rock Shelter #1, Arthur Waddicor, 30(2) :10<br />

Classification <strong>of</strong> Certain Chipped Implements, Part I, A, Benjamin L. Smith, 11(4):83<br />

Classification <strong>of</strong> Some <strong>Massachusetts</strong> Pottery, William S. Fowler, 10(1):4<br />

Classification <strong>of</strong> Stone Implements <strong>of</strong> <strong>the</strong> <strong>No</strong>r<strong>the</strong>ast, William S. Fowler, 25(1):1<br />

Classification <strong>of</strong> <strong>the</strong> Aboriginal Cultures in <strong>the</strong> State <strong>of</strong> New York, Maurice Robbins,<br />

1(2) :30<br />

Coburn Site: A Burial Complex on Cape Cod, The, Frank Kremp, 22(3-4) :33<br />

Cohannet Line, The, Rei Heino, 24(2) :35<br />

Collection from an Ordinary, Average Field in Eastern Maryland, A, William B. Marye,<br />

7(4):76<br />

Colonial Invasion <strong>of</strong> Hereditary Lands, The, Leaman F. Hallett, 20(3) :34<br />

Comments, William A. Haviland, 32(1-2) :33<br />

Comments on a Shawsheen River Site, Walter A. Vossberg, 20(3) :37<br />

Comments on Bullen's Review <strong>of</strong> The Pre-Iroquoian Occupations <strong>of</strong> New York State,<br />

William A. Ritchie, 6(3) :43<br />

Comments on Culture Growth and Change in Eastern <strong>Massachusetts</strong> by Ripley P. Bullen,<br />

William S. Fowler, 13(3) :28<br />

Comments on Interpreting <strong>the</strong> Past, Maurice Robbins, 5(3):40<br />

Comments on Tangible and Intangible Evidence, Frederick J. Pohl, 35(3-4) :33<br />

Comments on <strong>the</strong> Follins Pond Report, Frederick J. Pohl, 14(4) :105<br />

Comparative Study <strong>of</strong> Hoe and Spade Blades, William S. Fowler, 35(1-2):1<br />

Concerning An Ethnological Introduction to <strong>the</strong> Long Island Indians John H. Morice and<br />

Frank G. Speck, 7(3) :59<br />

Connecticut Valley Chapter, The, William S. Fowler, 10(3) :59<br />

Constitution and By-Laws: The <strong>Massachusetts</strong> <strong>Archaeological</strong> <strong>Society</strong>, Inc., Anon.,<br />

4(2):25<br />

Contributions to <strong>the</strong> Advance <strong>of</strong> New England Archaeology, William S. Fowler, 25(3-4) :50<br />

Cornmills: a Mountaintop Example, William S. Fowler, 36(1-2) :22<br />

Correlation <strong>of</strong> Seven Sites in <strong>the</strong> Narragansett Bay Drainage, William S. Fowler,<br />

24(3-4) : 37<br />

Cracked Rock Shelter, The, William S. Fowler, 37(1-2) :20<br />

Cremation Burial Complex in Carver, A, Rodney W. Roach, 32(3-4):1<br />

Cremation Cult <strong>of</strong> <strong>the</strong> Dead at Swan Hold, Richard G. Sautter, 28(2) :17<br />

"Crowned--54" Pipe Fragment from Alpine Landing, N.J., A, Julius Lopez, 18(3) :55<br />

Cultural Relationships and Terminology in New England, Ripley P. Bullen, 1(3):27<br />

Cultural Traits <strong>of</strong> <strong>the</strong> Sou<strong>the</strong>rn New England Indians, Leaman F. Hallett, 15(4) :59<br />

Culture Growth and Change in Eastern <strong>Massachusetts</strong>, Ripley P. Bullen, 13(2):8<br />

Culture Sequence at <strong>the</strong> Potter Pond Site, William S. Fowler and Herbert A. Lu<strong>the</strong>r,<br />

11(4) :91<br />

D<br />

Dated Pipe from Manhattan Island, New York, A, Edward J. Kaeser, 24(3-4) :53<br />

Deerfield <strong>Archaeological</strong> Display, Richard W. Hatch, 31(3-4):8<br />

Department <strong>of</strong> Curious Coincidences, Anon., 9(1):14<br />

Diagnostic Stone Bowl Industry, The, William S. Fowler, 36(3-4):1<br />

Did Lafitau Draw What He Saw?, William S. Fowler, 21(3-4) :<strong>38</strong><br />

Digging at Indian Work Shops near Plymouth, Mass., W. W. Whiting, 4( 1) :13<br />

Dimensional Determination from Potsherds, Melvin V. Landon, 20(3) :46<br />

Discoveries at Wilcox Brook Site, William S. Fowler, 36(1-2):1<br />

Discovery: An Impelling Force in Research (Editorial), Anon., 26(3-4) :64<br />

Discovery <strong>of</strong> a New Major Aboriginal Lithic Source, William F. Bowman and Gerald D.<br />

Zeoli, <strong>38</strong>( 3) :34<br />

Discovery <strong>of</strong> Fertilizer in Maize Cultivation, William S. Fowler, 31(3-4) :23<br />

Discovery <strong>of</strong> 52 Cache Blades in Squantum, William T. Williams, 24(3-4):56<br />

Discovery -- The Indian Keyway, A, William S. Fowler, 1(4) :16<br />

Discussion <strong>of</strong> Some Sites in <strong>the</strong> Sou<strong>the</strong>astern Coastal Area, A, Charles F. Sherman,<br />

6(3) : 33<br />

Distribution <strong>of</strong> Settlement Among <strong>the</strong> Polar Eskimo, W. Elmer Ekblaw, 8(3) :39


VOLUME <strong>38</strong>, NUMBER 4<br />

Division <strong>of</strong> Labor: <strong>Archaeological</strong> Discoveries, William S. Fowler, 37(1-2):6<br />

Dogs <strong>of</strong> <strong>the</strong> <strong>No</strong>r<strong>the</strong>astern Woodland Indians, Eva L. Butler and Wendell S. Hadlock,<br />

10( 2) :17<br />

Dolly Bond Steatite Quarry, The, Ripley P. Bullen, 2(1) :14<br />

Dolmen on Martha's Vineyard, The, Frederick Johnson, 6(2) :29<br />

Domestic Evidence at Steatite Quarries, William S. Fowler, 22(3-4)49<br />

Dwight Blaney Collection, The, Ripley P. Bullen, 7(4) :77<br />

Eagle Dam Site, The, Wrentham, Mass., Stephen Keighley, 12(4) :53<br />

Early Archaics at <strong>the</strong> Bluff Site, William S. Fowler, 33(1-2):1<br />

Early Nineteenth Century Passamaquoddy Bark Box with an Anthropomorphic Decoration, An,<br />

Ernest S. Dodge, 14(2) :77<br />

Early Occupation Site, Eastport, Maine, An, Isaac W. Kingsbury and Wendell W. Hadlock,<br />

12(2) :22<br />

Eating Practices in Aboriginal New England, William S. Fowler, 36(3-4) :21<br />

Eaton Site: A Dugout Workshop, The, Arthur Petzold, 22(3-4) :46<br />

Eden Points in <strong>Massachusetts</strong>, William S. Fowler, 33(3-4) :29<br />

Editorial Comment, Anon., 20(1) :16<br />

Editorial Comment on Preparation <strong>of</strong> Manuscripts, Anon., 21(3-4) :64<br />

Editorial Comment on Publicizing <strong>Archaeological</strong> Excavations, Anon., 21(1) :16<br />

Editorial Comments, Douglas S. Byers, 1(4):1<br />

Editorial Greeting and Exhortation, An, Dena F. Dincauze, 37(3-4) :35<br />

Editorial <strong>No</strong>tes, Chester S. Chard, 2(2):1<br />

Editorial on Excavation Methods, William S. Fowler, 22(1) :16<br />

Editorial on <strong>the</strong> Progress <strong>of</strong> <strong>the</strong> M.A.S., Douglas S. Byers, 1(3):1<br />

Eel Bridge Site, The, Gerald C. Dunn, 21(3-4) :33<br />

Eel River Sites, Plymouth, <strong>Massachusetts</strong>, Jesse Brewer, 29(3-4) :59<br />

Effigy Carvings, William S. Fowler, 36(1-2) :28<br />

Eight Platform or "Monitor" Pipes in <strong>the</strong> Peabody Museum, Salem <strong>Massachusetts</strong>, Wendell<br />

S. Hadlock, 8(4):49<br />

Engraved Stone from Meductic Flat, An, Nicholas N. Smith, 22(1) :14<br />

Engraved Wing Atlatl Weight, An, William B. Taylor, 36(1-2) :16<br />

Ernest S. Clarke Collection, The, Ripley P. Bullen, 8(3):47<br />

Ethnological Introduction to <strong>the</strong> Long Island Indians, An, Carlos A.H. Westez, 6(3):39<br />

Ethnology <strong>of</strong> <strong>No</strong>r<strong>the</strong>rn New England and <strong>the</strong> Maritime Provinces, Ernest S. Dodge, 18(4) :68<br />

Evidence <strong>of</strong> Typological Stratigraphy at Seth's Swamp, Wellfleet, <strong>Massachusetts</strong>, Howard<br />

Torrey, 7(3): 50<br />

Excavating without Damaging Property, Jesse Brewer, 5(2) :29<br />

Excavations in <strong>the</strong> Blue Hill River Workship, John H. Rowe, 2(2) :20<br />

Experimental Study <strong>of</strong> <strong>the</strong> Manufacture <strong>of</strong> Articles <strong>of</strong> Bone and Antler, An, Ernest E.<br />

Tyzzer, 19(3) :37<br />

F<br />

Fea<strong>the</strong>rs, Laurence K. Gahan, 22(2) :30<br />

FieZd ArchaeoZogy by R.J.C. Atkinson (Book Review), Frank Glynn, 15(1) :21<br />

Fife Brook Surveys and Excavations, Deerfield River, William W. Fitzhugh, 33(1-2) :21<br />

Figured Art: Its Presence in Stone Age New England, William S. Fowler, 35(1-2) :20<br />

Finds at an Aurignacian Station in Detmold, Germany, Laurance K. Gahan, 8( 2) :24<br />

Fire: The First Scientific Tool <strong>of</strong> Man, Elmer T. Erb, 31(3-4) :20<br />

First Interim Report on <strong>the</strong> Excavations at Site M-23-26, Hallam L. Movius, Jr., 2(2) :17<br />

Five Unusual Caches at <strong>the</strong> Boats Site, Edward F. Rose, 14(4) :109<br />

Fluted Point Recovery at Titicut, A, Joseph Mello, 36(1-2):8<br />

Following <strong>the</strong> Trail <strong>of</strong> Early Man (Editorial), William S. Fowler, 35(3-4) :31<br />

Fort Hill Bluff Site, The, William B. Taylor, <strong>38</strong>(1-2):7<br />

Fort Hill Field Site, William S. Fowler, 35(1-2) :17<br />

Fortified Hill in Mendon, A, J. Edward Barnes, 9(4) :82<br />

Forts, Boundaries, or Ha-Has?, Ripley P. Bullen, 4(1):1<br />

E<br />

15


18 THE MASSACHUSETTS ARCHAEOLOGICAL SOCIETY BULLETIN<br />

Kensington Stone, The, Erik Moltke, 13(4):33<br />

Kingston Pot, A, Donald J. Viera, 23(2) :32<br />

Land Occupied by <strong>the</strong> Nipmuck Indians <strong>of</strong> Central New England 1600-1700, Dennis A.<br />

Connole, <strong>38</strong>(1-2) :14<br />

Late Excavations at <strong>the</strong> Holden Site, Truro, Mass., Ross M<strong>of</strong>fett, 12(4) :47<br />

Late Woodland Burial on Martha's Vineyard, A, Bernard H. Stockley, 31(1-2):30<br />

Latten Spoons from <strong>the</strong> Old Colony, Percy E. Raymond, 11(1):6<br />

Leaf Knife Complex, The, William S. Fowler, 26(1) :10<br />

Letters to <strong>the</strong> Editor, Anon., 2(2) :30<br />

Letters to <strong>the</strong> Editor, Anon., 2(3) :12<br />

Letters to <strong>the</strong> Editor, Anon., 2(4) :14<br />

Lithic Analysis <strong>of</strong> a Mudstone/"Argillite" Workshop: The Wills Hill Site, Alan Strauss,<br />

<strong>38</strong>(1-2) :22<br />

Locally Available Stone: First Choice for Artifact Manufacture, Charles F. Walcott,<br />

15(2) :37<br />

Locust Spring Site: Its Occupational Activities, William S. Fowler, 24(1):6<br />

Lone Pine Site: A Culture in Transition, Constantine Zariphes, Jr., 32(1-2) :12<br />

Long Cove: A Maine Shell Deposit Site, Walter G. Bruce, 27(1):8<br />

Magic Stones and Shamans, William S. Fowler, 36(3-4):10<br />

Maine Archaic Complex, William S. Fowler, 33(3-4) :10<br />

Maine Coast Pottery (Seventh Installment), William J. Howes, 21( 3-4) :54<br />

Making Mockery <strong>of</strong> Archaeology, Arthur C. Parker, 1(3):3<br />

Making <strong>of</strong> Wing Atlatl Weights, The, William S. Fowler, 36(1-2):19<br />

Man in <strong>No</strong>r<strong>the</strong>astern <strong>No</strong>rth America (Book Review), W. Elmer Ekblaw, 8( 4) : 60<br />

Mansion Inn Site-- Wayland, The, J. Alfred Mansfield, 23(1):1<br />

Manzanita Island Ceramic Pot Recovery, A. Elizabeth Knap Farmer, 36(1-2) :11<br />

Mary Rowlandson and Indian Behavior, William S. Fowler, 35(3-4):25<br />

<strong>Massachusetts</strong> Fluted Points, William S. Fowler, 16(1):2<br />

Massasoit Chapter, The, Charles F. Sherman, 10(3) :61<br />

Massasoit' s Domain: Is "Wampanoag" <strong>the</strong> Correct Designation?, Warner F. Gookin, 20( 1) :12<br />

Materials Used For Chipped Implements, Ross M<strong>of</strong>fett, 5(3):42<br />

Matters Disclosed by Erosion at Ryder Beach Site, Ross M<strong>of</strong>fett, 14(2) :69<br />

Meaning <strong>of</strong> Membership, The, Eugene Winter, 21(1):15<br />

Medicine and Pharmacy <strong>of</strong> <strong>the</strong> New England Indians, Leaman F. Hallett 17(3) :46<br />

Meeting <strong>of</strong> <strong>the</strong> Eastern States <strong>Archaeological</strong> <strong>Society</strong>, The, Anon., 1(2):7<br />

Membership: January 1, 1941, Edward Brooks, 2(2):6<br />

Membership List, Anon., 4(2) :30<br />

Membership List: April 1945, Anon., 6(3) :46<br />

Membership List, Anon., 8(1) :12<br />

Membership List, Anon., 10(3):76<br />

Membership List, Anon., 18(2):37<br />

Message from <strong>the</strong> President, Benjamin L. Smith, 10(3) :49<br />

Message from <strong>the</strong> President, A. Walter A. Vossberg, 18(2) :25<br />

Metal Cutouts <strong>of</strong> <strong>the</strong> <strong>No</strong>r<strong>the</strong>ast, William S. Fowler, 34(3-4):24<br />

Methods <strong>of</strong> Excavating and Recording (Editorial), William S. Fowler, 24(3-4) :68<br />

Methods <strong>of</strong> Translating Indian Place Names, Laurence K. Gahan, 21(3-4) :46<br />

Metsoo'onk (Experience Mayhew's Word for Victuals), Warner F. Gookin, 12(4) :58<br />

Micah Rafe--Indian Man <strong>of</strong> Lower Cape Cod, W. Sears Nickerson, 22(2):17<br />

Midwestern Taxonomic Method and Its Application to an Eastern <strong>Massachusetts</strong> Group, The,<br />

Benjamin L. Smith, 2(1):1<br />

K<br />

L<br />

M


20 THE MASSACHUSETTS ARCHAEOLOGICAL SOCIETY BULLETIN<br />

Osseous Find at Follins Pond, An, Bernard W. Powell, 18(2) :32<br />

otstungo Effigy Ceramic Pipes, William S. Fowler, 35(1-2) :28<br />

Our Nantucket Project, Edward Brooks, 1(1) :12<br />

Our Survey, Maurice Robbins, 1(1):7<br />

Oval Scraper Complex, The, William S. Fowler, 10(3):73<br />

Paleo-Indian in <strong>the</strong> <strong>No</strong>r<strong>the</strong>ast, The, William A. Ritchie, 19(2):21<br />

Parallel Stem Point Comparison, William S. Fowler, 30(3-4) :24<br />

Partial Reply to Fowler's "Comments on Culture Growth and Change 1.-n Eastern <strong>Massachusetts</strong>",<br />

A, Ripley, P. Bullen, 14(2):74<br />

Patackosi (A Poem), Adrian P, Whiting, 18(4) :78<br />

Peaked Hill Site, The, Ross M<strong>of</strong>fett, 7(3) :53<br />

Pebble Beach Workshops <strong>of</strong> <strong>the</strong> South Shore, Gudrun B. Howe, and Henry F. Howe, 8(3):44<br />

Pebble-Made Projectile Points, Richard Q. Bourn, Jr., 28(1) :14<br />

Peculiar Implement from Connecticut, A, Donald G. Merrill, 12(4):62<br />

Pilgrims as Archaeologists, The,Warner F. Gookin, 11(2) :19<br />

Pipes and Rare Products <strong>of</strong> <strong>the</strong> Stone Bowl Industry, William S. Fowler, 13(1) :13<br />

Pipe Stem Theory, William S. Fowler, 4(3) :39<br />

Pits at <strong>the</strong> <strong>No</strong>ok Farm Camp Site, W.W. Whiting and Jesse Brewer, 7(2) :43<br />

Plattsburg Pot from New York State, A, Karl S. Dodge, 24(2) :34<br />

Point Peninsula Site, Manitoulin Island, Lake Huron, A, Thomas E. Lee, 26(2) :19<br />

Polynesian Adze from Martha's Vineyard, A, Howard R. Sargent, 12(3) :27<br />

Ponkapoag Site: M-35-7, The, Robert A. Martin, <strong>38</strong>(3) :53<br />

Porpoise Effigy, A, Maurice Robbins, 24(3-4) :49<br />

Portable Structures and Winter Archaeology, Billie Hoornbeek and Charles B. Bolian,<br />

<strong>38</strong>( 1-2) : 20<br />

Possible Explanation <strong>of</strong> "Fire-Beds" or Hearths, A, Douglas S. Byers, 5( 4) :64<br />

Possible Paleo-Indian Migration Routes in <strong>the</strong> <strong>No</strong>r<strong>the</strong>ast: A Geological Approach, Harold<br />

W. Borns, Jr., 34(1-2) :13<br />

Possible Red Paint Grave from Martha's Vineyard, A, James A. Tuck, 33(3-4) :32<br />

Pot Boiling with Red-Hot Stones, Howard S. Russell, 24(3-4) :58<br />

Pot from <strong>No</strong>ok Farm Camp Site, Plymouth, Mass., A, W.W. Whiting, 10(2):44<br />

Pottery Analysis, A, William S. Fowler, 36(1-2):25<br />

Pottery Restoration Described, William S. Fowler, 30(3-4) :29<br />

Pottery Size Scale, William J. Howes, 21(3-4):61<br />

Pottery Traits <strong>of</strong> <strong>the</strong> Plymouth District, Charles F. Sherman, 8(2) :27<br />

Pottery Types from Hampden County, <strong>Massachusetts</strong>, Edward Brooks, 7(4) :78<br />

Pottery Types <strong>of</strong> Central New England, William S. Fowler, 12(3) :<strong>38</strong><br />

Prehistoric Hunters <strong>of</strong> Newfoundland-Labrador and Their Relationship to New England<br />

Archaeology, Elmer Harp, Jr., 18(4) :65<br />

Pre-Historic Relics from Beverly, John Robinson, 8(2) :22<br />

The Pre-Iroquoian Occupations <strong>of</strong> New York State by William A. Ritchie (Book Review),<br />

Ripley P. Bullen, 5(4) :60<br />

Preliminary Bibliography <strong>of</strong> <strong>the</strong> Archaeology <strong>of</strong> <strong>the</strong> New England Indians, A, Bibliography<br />

Committee, 3(1):1<br />

Preliminary Report <strong>of</strong> Field Activities at Fort Hill, Karl S. Dodge, 14(2):79<br />

Preliminary Report <strong>of</strong> <strong>the</strong> Concord River at Billerica, Mass., A, Walter A. Vossberg<br />

and J. Alfred Mansfield, 16(2) :20<br />

Preliminary Report <strong>of</strong> <strong>the</strong> Powers Shell Heap in Kingston, <strong>Massachusetts</strong>, A, Charles F.<br />

Sherman, 9(4):75<br />

Preliminary Report on <strong>the</strong> Curvature <strong>of</strong> Pottery, Melvin V. Landon, 24(3-4) :64<br />

Preliminary Report on <strong>the</strong> Lagoon Pond Site, E.G. Huntington, 18(3) :59<br />

Preliminary Report on <strong>the</strong> Nunkatusset Site, A, Roland E. Engstrom, 13(1):5<br />

Preliminary Report on <strong>the</strong> Ragged Mountain Site, William A. Fowler, 10(2):36<br />

Preliminary Report on <strong>the</strong> Second Season's Work at Site M-52-3, Nantucket Island, A,<br />

Edward Brooks, 2(2) :15<br />

P


22 THE MASSACHUSETTS ARCHAEOLOGICAL SOCIETY BULLETIN<br />

Riddle <strong>of</strong> <strong>the</strong> Stone Beehives, Frederick J. Pohl, 25(3-4) :72<br />

Rocks and <strong>the</strong> Archaeologist, Arthur C. Lord, Jr., 20(1):8<br />

Rock Shelter at Bourne, <strong>Massachusetts</strong>, A, Jesse Brewer, 9(1) :15<br />

Rock Shelter at <strong>the</strong> Stony Point Battle Field Site, A. Edward J. Kaeser, 22(3-4) :56<br />

Rock Shelter near Worcester. A, Ripley P. Bullen, 10(1) :16<br />

Sabatia Plain Site <strong>No</strong>.1, George H. Barton, 32(3-4):28<br />

Sailors' Narratives <strong>of</strong> Voyages Along <strong>the</strong> New England Coast 1524-1624 (Original Narrative<br />

Reprint #1). Giovanni da Verrazano, 1(3) :30<br />

Sand Bank Burials. Jesse Brewer, 17(2) :17<br />

Savich Farm Site: A Preliminary Report, The, R.A. Regensburg, 32(1-2):20<br />

Scrapers: A Proposed Functional Classification, William S. Fowler, 2(2) :20<br />

Seaver Farm Cremation Burials, William B. Taylor. 33(3-4):1<br />

Seaver Farm Red Paint Burials. William B. Taylor, 31(3-4):1<br />

Seaver Farm Salvage Excavation. William B. Taylor, 34(1-2) :24<br />

Seaver Farm Site, The, Karl S. Dodge. 23(3-4) :24<br />

Secondary Cremation Burial <strong>No</strong>.2, The Hawes Site, Maurice Robbins. 24(2):30<br />

Seman Site: A New York State Excavation, The, Philip W. Johannesson and Arthur C.<br />

Glamm, Jr.• 26(3-4) :44<br />

Sharpening Stones. William S. Fowler, 37(1-2) :28<br />

Shell Heaps on Sandy Neck, Barnstable, Mass., Ripley P. Bullen and Edward Brooks,<br />

10( 1) : 7<br />

Ship's Shoring at Follins Pond, The. Frederick Pohl, 16(3) :53<br />

Significance <strong>of</strong> Movement Among <strong>the</strong> Polar Eskimo, W. Elmer Ekblaw, 10(1):1<br />

Significance <strong>of</strong> Wear on Chipped Implements, Charles F. Walcott, 27(1) :12<br />

Significant Ceramic Pipe Recoveries, William S. Fowler, 26(3-4):49<br />

Significant Find, A, William S. Fowler and Jess W. Welt, l7tl):9<br />

Significant Plummet Recoveries, William S. Fowler, 36(3-4):31<br />

Site Characteristics in <strong>the</strong> Concord River Valley, Benjamin L. Smith, 5(3) :37<br />

Sitting Bull: The Patriot, William S. Fowler, 34(3-4) :30<br />

Six Specialized Knives, E.G. Huntington, 17(1) :15<br />

Small Stem Points <strong>of</strong> <strong>the</strong> <strong>No</strong>r<strong>the</strong>ast, Richard Q. Bourn, Jr., 32(1-2):25<br />

Smith Brook Site, The. Richard Q. Bourn, Jr., 29(3-4) :60<br />

Smoking Habits <strong>of</strong> <strong>the</strong> Wabanaki, Nicholas N. Smith, 18(4):76<br />

Soapstone Bowl Making as Practiced at <strong>the</strong> Westfield Quarry, William S. Fowler, 4(3) :42<br />

Some Aboriginal Stone Works in New England, William S. Fowler, 33(3-4) :18<br />

Some Aspects <strong>of</strong> <strong>the</strong> Use <strong>of</strong> Red Ochre in Prehistoric Burials. Benjamin L. Smith, 11(2) :22<br />

Some Comments on <strong>the</strong> Mooring Hole Problem, Ripley P. Bullen, 19(3) :50<br />

Some Connecticut Burials, Bernard W. Powell, 23(2) :26<br />

Some Early House Floors, Maurice Robbins, 32(1-2):1<br />

Some Evidence <strong>of</strong> <strong>the</strong> Use <strong>of</strong> Red Ochre into Historic Times, Maurice Robbins, 17(2) :18<br />

Some Indian Burials from Sou<strong>the</strong>astern <strong>Massachusetts</strong> (Part I). Maurice Robbins, 20(2) :17<br />

Some Indian Burials from Sou<strong>the</strong>astern <strong>Massachusetts</strong>. Part 2 - <strong>the</strong> Wapanucket Burials.<br />

Maurice Robbins, 20(4) :61<br />

Some <strong>No</strong>tes on <strong>the</strong> Winslow Site, Ripley P. Bullen, 13(1) :10<br />

Some Samples <strong>of</strong> Red Ochre, Ross M<strong>of</strong>fett, 15(3) :58<br />

Some Shell Heaps in Truro, <strong>Massachusetts</strong>, Ross M<strong>of</strong>fett, 7(2) :17<br />

Some Sources <strong>of</strong> New England Flints, William S. Fowler, 32(3-4):23<br />

Some Stone Drilling Techniques, Douglas S. Byers, 19(3) :51<br />

Some Thoughts on <strong>the</strong> Historic Art <strong>of</strong> <strong>the</strong> Indians <strong>of</strong> <strong>No</strong>r<strong>the</strong>astern <strong>No</strong>rth America, Ernest<br />

S. Dodge, l3(l):l<br />

Some Unusual Artifacts from Ram Pasture I. Nantucket, Mass., Bernard H. Stockley.<br />

25(3-4) :70<br />

Some Uses <strong>of</strong> Birch Bark in <strong>No</strong>r<strong>the</strong>rn New England, Eva L. Butler and Wendell S. Hadlock,<br />

l8( 4) : 72<br />

Sources <strong>of</strong> New England History Prior to 1620, The, Henry F. Howe, 3(2) :19<br />

S


VOLUME <strong>38</strong>, NUMBER 4 23<br />

South Bay Quartzite Quarry, Raymond Lemire, 36(3-4) :17<br />

South Swansea Burials, The, Mason M. Phelps, 8(3) :33<br />

Spectrographic Analysis <strong>of</strong> Some New England Steatite, Ripley P. Bullen and David H.<br />

Howell, 4( 4) :62<br />

Standardized System for <strong>the</strong> Classification and Description <strong>of</strong> Stone Implements from<br />

New England. Part A -- Projectile Points, Frederick P. Orchard, 2(3) :10<br />

Statement <strong>of</strong> <strong>the</strong> Organization and Aims <strong>of</strong> <strong>the</strong> Eastern States <strong>Archaeological</strong> Federation, A,<br />

Cornelius Osgood, 1(3) :11<br />

Status <strong>of</strong> Colonial Archaeology in <strong>Massachusetts</strong> in 1941, Henry Hornblower II, 4(3) :41<br />

Steatite Vessel and O<strong>the</strong>r Artifacts from a Hilltop Cache in Truro, <strong>Massachusetts</strong>, A,<br />

Ross M<strong>of</strong>fett, 8(4):52<br />

Steatite Vessel from Nantucket, A, Edward S. Roy, 17(3):51<br />

Stickney Site, Ballardvale, <strong>Massachusetts</strong>, The, Ripley P. Bullen and Arthur M. H<strong>of</strong>mann,<br />

5(2) :20<br />

Stone Bowl Industry, Its Importance as a Culture Diagnostic, William S. Fowler, 17(4) :74<br />

Stone Bowl-Making at <strong>the</strong> Westfield Quarry, William S. Fowler, 30(1):6<br />

Stone Bowls on Cape Cod, L. Richard Fulcher, 36(1-2) :30<br />

Stone Importation in Prehistoric <strong>Massachusetts</strong>, William S. Fowler, 11(2) :29<br />

Stone Knife from Salem Willows, A, Ernest S. Dodge, 7(1) :16<br />

Stone Pavement at Andover, <strong>Massachusetts</strong>, A, Arthur M. H<strong>of</strong>mann, 3(2) :25<br />

Stone Pipe from Plymouth, A, William S, Fowler, 30(3-4) :26<br />

Stones <strong>of</strong> Stone Age New England, The, Leo D. Otis, 11(2) :45<br />

Stone Working: Fracturing or Chipping, Charles R. McGimsey, III, 24(3-4) :60<br />

Strange Deposit <strong>of</strong> Spearpoints, A, Arthur M. H<strong>of</strong>mann, 5(1) :11<br />

Study <strong>of</strong> Cordage and Rolled Copper Beads, Burial #6, Titicut Site, A, Britta D. Jeppson,<br />

25(2):37<br />

Study <strong>of</strong> Projectile Points, A, William S. Fowler, 35(3-4):1<br />

Study <strong>of</strong> <strong>the</strong> Long Island Indian Problem, A, Chief Red Thunder Cloud (Carlos A.H. Westez),<br />

5(2) :17<br />

Styles <strong>of</strong> Pottery in Connecticut, Irving Rouse, 7(1):1<br />

Suggested Classification <strong>of</strong> Atlatl Weights, William S. Fowler, 17(2) :25<br />

Suggestions <strong>of</strong> Stratigraphy in Eastern <strong>Massachusetts</strong>, Ripley P. Bullen, 7(3):54<br />

Summary <strong>of</strong> a Cultural Area; Long Island, New York, Walter A. Vossberg, 13(2):10<br />

Survival <strong>of</strong> <strong>the</strong> <strong>No</strong>rse Runes into Modern Times, A, Arthur George Smith, 21(2):22<br />

Survival <strong>of</strong> <strong>the</strong> Red Paint Complex in Maine, The, Nicholas N. Smith, 17(1):4<br />

Suwannee Point Finds in Florida, Jesse Brewer, 26(2):17<br />

Swan Hold Site, The, William S. Fowler, 13(2):1<br />

Sweat Houses in <strong>the</strong> Sou<strong>the</strong>rn New England Area, Eva L. Butler, 7(1) :11<br />

Sweet-Meadow Brook: A Pottery Site in Rhode Island, William S. Fowler, 18(1):1<br />

Sweet's Knoll, Maurice Robbins, Arthur Staples and Arnold Staples, 16(4):61<br />

System for Site Identification, The, Anon., 1(1) :11<br />

Tangible and Intangible Evidence, William S. Fowler, 35(1-2) :31<br />

Taxonomic Approach Redefined, The, Douglas S. Byers, 2(2) :21<br />

Technical Illustration Applied to Archaeology, Jean-Jacques Rivard, 25(2) :44<br />

Three Burials at <strong>the</strong> Hughes Site, Nantucket, Mass., Ripley P. Bullen and Edward Brooks,<br />

10(1) :14<br />

Three Contact Burials from Eastern <strong>Massachusetts</strong>, Wendell S. Hadlock, 10(3) :63<br />

Three Iroquois Pots from New Jersey, William S. Fowler, 27(2):30<br />

Three Pembroke Burial Knives, William S. Fowler, 37(1-2) :12<br />

Thumb Nail Sketch <strong>of</strong> King Philip's War, A; Excerpts from a book in preparation, Henry<br />

F. Howe, 9(4):76<br />

Tillite Bluff Site: A Prelilinary Report, The, William F. Bowman and Gerald D. Zeoli,<br />

35(1-2) :24<br />

Titicut Child <strong>of</strong> <strong>the</strong> Earth, Estelle Mason, 33(1-2) :10<br />

Titicut Indian Burials -- A Soliloquy, Mason M. Phelps, 11(2) :21<br />

T


24 THE MASSACHUSETTS ARCHAEOLOGICAL SOCIETY BULLETIN<br />

Titicut Site, The, Maurice Robbins, 28(3-4) :33<br />

Tomahawks <strong>of</strong> Central New England, William S. Fowler, 12(3) :29<br />

To <strong>the</strong> Members <strong>of</strong> <strong>the</strong> <strong>Massachusetts</strong> <strong>Archaeological</strong> <strong>Society</strong>, Maurice Robbins, 1(1):2<br />

Toward a Chronology for <strong>Massachusetts</strong>, Benjamin L. Smith, 7(3) :49<br />

Trade Tomahawks, William S. Fowler, 13(3)23<br />

Trading Center for Local Products Found on <strong>the</strong> Hoccanum Road in <strong>the</strong> Town <strong>of</strong> Hadley,<br />

<strong>Massachusetts</strong>, William J. Howes, 3(4) :58<br />

Trail <strong>of</strong> <strong>the</strong> Indian, The, Chauncey C. Ferguson, 13(1) :11<br />

Traprock: Almost Ready-Made for <strong>the</strong> Tools <strong>of</strong> <strong>the</strong> Connecticut Valley Indians, Leo D.<br />

Otis, 9(1):1<br />

Triangular Hoes <strong>of</strong> <strong>the</strong> <strong>No</strong>r<strong>the</strong>ast and Their Diffusion, William S. Fowler, 9(4):83<br />

Twin Rivers: Four-Culture Sequence at a Rhode Island Site, William S. Fowler, 14(1):1<br />

Two Barnstable Pots, George K. Johnson, 23(3-4) :45<br />

Two Burials at Tiverton, Rhode Island, Adelaid K. Bullen and Ripley P. Bullen, 8(1):5<br />

Two Burials on <strong>the</strong> Slocum River, Douglas S. Byers, 16(4) :77<br />

Two Duxbury Pots, William S. Fowler, 26(2) :30<br />

Two Indian Burials in <strong>No</strong>rth Middleboro, William S. Fowler, 35(3-4) :14<br />

Two Letters to <strong>the</strong> Editor Concerning <strong>the</strong> Boundaries <strong>of</strong> <strong>the</strong> Nipmucks, Harry Andrew<br />

Wright, 2( 4) :14<br />

Two Sites in Sou<strong>the</strong>rn New England, Douglas S. Byers, 20(1):1<br />

Tyngsboro Pot, A, Edward J. Bielski, 23(2):34<br />

Typology <strong>of</strong> <strong>the</strong> Heard Pond Site, William S. Fowler, 11(3) :74<br />

Ulu Recovery at Swan Hold, An. William S. Fowler, 31(1-2) :27<br />

Unique Artifact from Cape Cod, A, Maurice Robbins, 37(3-4):45<br />

Unique Artifact from Raynham, Mass., A, Maurice Robbins, <strong>38</strong>(1-2) :12<br />

Unique Artifacts from Maine, George H. Barton, 24(2) :25<br />

Unique Find, A, Walter E. Franke, 11(2):17<br />

Unusual Burial at Plymouth, An, Charles F. Sherman, 12(3) :37<br />

Unusual Indian Harpoon from Truro, An, Ross M<strong>of</strong>fett, 30(3-4) :22<br />

Unusual Pestle Find, An, William S. Fowler, 31(1-2) :26<br />

Unusual Pottery Jar from East Milton, An, Edmund S. Carpenter, 4(3) :39<br />

Unusual Stone Blade from Wellfleet, <strong>Massachusetts</strong>, An, Howard Torrey, 7(4) :70<br />

Vandals with Ph.D. 's, Floyd Painter, 37(1-2):33<br />

Vinland Voyage-1941, The, Douglas S. Byers, :(4) :52<br />

Voyage <strong>of</strong> Martin Pring, 1603 (Original Narrative Reprint #3), Martin Pring, 2(1):23<br />

Voyages <strong>of</strong> Bartholomew Gosnold, 1602 (Original Narrative Reprint #2), John Brereton,<br />

1(4) :11<br />

W<br />

Wabanaki Dances, Nicholas N. Smith, 16(2):29<br />

Wabanaki Uses <strong>of</strong> Greases and Oils, Nicholas N. Smith, 21(2) :19<br />

Warren King Moorehead Chapter, Florence M. Tufts, 10(3) :53<br />

Washakumaug Site, The,Robert W. Carlson, 25(2) :29<br />

Was <strong>the</strong> Guida Site <strong>the</strong> Center <strong>of</strong> Ceramic Influence? (Editorial), William S. Fowler,<br />

23(1):20<br />

West Brookfield Indian Burial, A, C.C. Ferguson, 9(1) :16<br />

Westford Indian Rock, The, William S. Fowler, 21(2) :21<br />

Whaletail Atlatl Weight, The, William S. Fowler, 35(1-2) :14<br />

What Is It?, William S. Fowler, <strong>38</strong>(1-2) :30<br />

Who Were <strong>the</strong> Builders? (Editorial). William S. Fowler, 32(1-2) :31<br />

Why Use <strong>the</strong> Metric System <strong>of</strong> Measurements for <strong>Archaeological</strong> Purposes?, William J.<br />

Howes, 6(3) :42<br />

U<br />

V


This journal and its contents may be used for research, teaching and private study purposes. Any substantial or systematic reproduction, re-distribution,<br />

re-selling,loan or sub-licensing, systematic supply or distribution in any form to anyone is expressly forbidden. ©2010 <strong>Massachusetts</strong> <strong>Archaeological</strong> <strong>Society</strong>.<br />

VOLUME <strong>38</strong>, NUMBER 4<br />

Wilbraham stone Bowl Quarry, The, William S. Fowler, 30(3-4):9<br />

Wing Atlatl Weight Find, A, Karl S. Dodge, 27(2): 28<br />

Winslow's Reports <strong>of</strong> <strong>the</strong> Indians, Charles F. Sherman (selected by), 3(4):43<br />

Winslow's Reports <strong>of</strong> <strong>the</strong> Indians (concluded), Charles F. Sherman, 4(1) :15<br />

Woodworking: An Important Industry, William S. Fowler, 23(3-4) :29<br />

Work Shop at Lake Tacoma, A, Gerald C, Dunn, 15(3) :57<br />

Workshop Logic, Jesse Brewer, 1(4) :21<br />

SUBJECT INDEX<br />

A<br />

adaptation, 9(4) :83<br />

Adena culture, 20(4) :49; 27(1):1<br />

agricultural techniques, 31(1-2) :11; 31(3-4) :23<br />

agricultural tools, 21(3-4) :<strong>38</strong>; 25(1):1<br />

agriculture, Indian, 22(3-4) :58; 31(1-2) :11<br />

Algonkian linguistics, 28(1):4<br />

announcements, 1(2):1<br />

archaeological goals, 1(3):3<br />

archaeology by Pilgrims, 11(2):11<br />

archaeology <strong>of</strong> Boston, Mass., 13(2) :8; 13(3) :15; Cape Cod, 5(1):6; 19(1):1; 28(1) :1;<br />

28(2):27; eastern Mass., 13(3):28; Long Island, 5(4) :56; 13(2):10; Maine, 2(4) :7;<br />

9(2-3) :17; New England, 1(3) :27; 3(1) :1; 14(2) :74; 14(3) :98; New Jersey, 8(1) :8;<br />

New York State, 1(2) :30; 5(3):48; 5(4) :60; 6(3) :43; 36(1-2) :11; <strong>No</strong>r<strong>the</strong>ast, 1(2):17;<br />

8(4):60; 22(3-4) :62; Rhode Island, 14(1):2<br />

archaeology, public, <strong>38</strong>(1-2):1<br />

Archaic lithics, Early, 25(2) :35<br />

Archaic period, Early, 29(3-4):53; Late, 17(4) :74; 20(4) :61; 36(3-4) :1; Middle,<br />

29(3-4):53<br />

Archaic sites, Early, 31(3-4) ;29; 37(3-4' :36; Late, 12(2) :22; 14(4) :109; 16(3) ;48;<br />

17(1) :9; 21(3-4) :43; 22(3-4) :33; 22(3-4) :46; 23( 1) :1; 23(3-4) :21; 24(2) :30; 28(1) :9;<br />

28(2) :24; 30(3-4) :1; 31(1-2) :1; 32(3-4) :1; 33(3-4) :1; 35(1-2) :9; Middle, 16(3) :48;<br />

20(1) :1<br />

arrow shafts, 1(4):21<br />

artifacts, analysis, 12(4) :62; 13(3):19; <strong>38</strong>(1-2) :12; identification, 19(2):27;<br />

<strong>38</strong>(1-2) :12; <strong>38</strong>(1-2):30; restoration, 34(1-2):29<br />

atlatl weights, 17(1) :13; 17(2) :25; 27(2) :28; 30(2) :15; 35(1-2) :14; 35(3-4) :8;<br />

36(1-2) :16; 36(1-2) :19<br />

Aurignacian sites, 8(2) :24<br />

axes, grooved, 27(1) :5; 37(1-2) :30<br />

B<br />

bark, box, 14(2):77; technology, 18(4) :72; uses <strong>of</strong>, 37(1-2) :15<br />

bibliography, 3(1):1<br />

Black Lucy, 6(2) :17<br />

boatstone, 33(1-2) :32<br />

book reviews, 4(4) :64; 5(4) :60; 8(1) :8; 8(4) :60; 15(1) :21; 30(1) :17; 32(1-2) :33;<br />

comment on 6(3) :43<br />

boulder tools, 14(special) :17<br />

bowls, stone, 4(3):42; 8(4):52; 17(3):51; 17(4):74; 30(1):6; 30(3-4):9; 31(1-2):1<br />

36(1-2):30; 36(3-4) :1; manufacture <strong>of</strong>, 29(1):1<br />

bronze artifacts, 24(2) :25<br />

Bronson Museum, 14(3) :89<br />

burials, 3(3):27; 3(3):35; 5(2):26; 6(1):15; 6(3):44; 7(4):65; 8(1):5; 8(1):6; 8(2):22;<br />

8(3):33; 9(1):4; 9(1):16; 9(2-3):17: 10(1):14; 10(3):63; 11(1):1; 11(1):10; 11(2):21;<br />

11(2):22; 11(2):37; 11(4):91; 12(1):8; 12(3):37; 14(2):69; 16(4):77; 17(2):17<br />

17(2) :22; 18(1) :1; 20(2) :17; 20(4) :61; 22(3-4) :33; 23(2) :26; 24(2) :30; 27(1):1<br />

28(3-4) :33; 29(3-4) :62; 30(3-4) :1; 31(1-2) :30; 32(1-2) :20; 33(1-2) :10; 33(3-4) :32;<br />

2S


26 THE MASSACHUSETTS ARCHAEOLOGICAL SOCIETY BULLETIN<br />

35(3-4):14; 35(3-4):18; 36(3-4) :10; 37(1-2) :12; cremations, 14(4) :109; 20(3):47;<br />

23(1) :1; 23(3-4) :21; 28(2) :17; 31(3-4) :1; 32(1-2) :20; 32(3-4) :1; 33(3-4) :1;<br />

34(1-2) :24 .<br />

C<br />

caches, 5(1):11; 5(2):28; 8(4):52; 9(4):73; 10(2):46; 10(4):94; 14(4):109; 17(1):6;<br />

23(3-4):50; 24(3-4) :56; 29(3-4) :60; 31(1-2) :28<br />

Canada (see site reports, Canada)<br />

Canada, <strong>No</strong>r<strong>the</strong>astern ,25(2) :<strong>38</strong><br />

Cape Cod (see archaeology <strong>of</strong> Cape Cod)<br />

carbon-14 dating, 12(2) :13; 28(1) :17<br />

cave art, 35(1-2) :20<br />

celts, 23(3-4) :50<br />

ceramic, analysis, 22(3-4) :44; 24(3-4) :64; 36(1-2) :25; designs, 6(4):64; 8(1):1;<br />

36(1-2) :11; influences, 23(1) :20; measurement, 20(3):46; 21(3-4):61<br />

ceramics, Colonial period, 4(3) :<strong>38</strong>; Stage 1 (see Woodland ceramics, early; Woodland<br />

sites, early); Stage 2 (see Woodland ceramics, middle; Woodland sites, middle);<br />

Stage 3 (see Woodland ceramics, middle and late; Woodland sites, middle and late);<br />

Stage 4 (see Woodland ceramics, late; Woodland sites, late)<br />

chapters, 1(3) :7; 10(3) :53; 10(3) :54; 10(3) :56; 10 (3) :59; 10(3) :60; 10(3) :61<br />

chipping techniques, 24(3-4)60<br />

chronology, cult.ra1, 7(3) :49; 7(3) :54; 13(2) :8; 13(3) :15; 13(3) :28; 14(1) :1; 19(1) :1;<br />

22( 1):9<br />

collecting, amateur, 23(2):36<br />

collections, artifact, 7(1):16; 7(4):68; 7(4):70; 7(4):76; 7(4):77; 8(2):22; 8(3):47;<br />

9(1) :2; 17(2) :29; Maine, 24(2) :25; surface, 8(3) :44; 28(1) :1; 32(1-2) :29<br />

Colonial artifacts, 32(1-2) :33; <strong>38</strong>(1-2) :12<br />

Colonial period, 6(1) :1; 6(2) :29; 13(3) :23; 20(3):34<br />

committee reports, 1(1):3; 1(2):9; 1(3):5; 1(3):6; 1(3):7; 11(4):83; 13(3):15; 14(2):83<br />

Connecticut (see site reports, Connecticut)<br />

Connecticut River Valley, 1(4) :4; 6(4) :58<br />

Connecticut Valley Chapter, 10( 3) : 59<br />

Contact Period, 10(3) :63; 20(2) :17; 34(3-4):24; 37(1-2) :22; ceramics, 23(3-4) :45;<br />

sites, 29(3-4) :62<br />

copper, axes, 21(2) :17; beads, 3(2) :11; 3(2) :18; 18(3) :59; 25(2) :37<br />

cordage, 25(2):37<br />

corn, 30(1) :17; millS, 36(1-2) :27<br />

cremations (see burials, cremations)<br />

cultural ecology, 5(3) :33; 5(3) :34; 25(2) :<strong>38</strong><br />

culture change, 13(2) :8; 13(3) :28; 14(2) :74<br />

dances, Wabanaki, 16(2) :29<br />

dating techniques, 12(2) :13; 16(2) :<strong>38</strong>; 28(1) :17<br />

Deerfield archaeological display, 31(3-4):8<br />

diffusion, 9(4) :83<br />

dogs, Indian, 10(2) :17<br />

dolmens, 6(2) :29<br />

Dorset CUlture, 18(4) :65<br />

dugout canoes, 22(3-4) :46; 30(1) :1; 37(1-2):1<br />

E<br />

Early Man, 35(3-4):31<br />

earthworks, 4(1):1; 9(4):82<br />

Eastern <strong>Massachusetts</strong> (see archaeology <strong>of</strong> eastern Mass.)<br />

Eastern States <strong>Archaeological</strong> Federation, 1(3):11<br />

eating utensils, 36(3-4) :21<br />

Editorial, 1(1) :2; 1(3) :1; 1(4) :1; 2(2) :1; 20(1) :16; 21(1) :16; 21(3-4) :64; 24(3-4) :68;<br />

D


VOLUME <strong>38</strong>, NUMBER 4 27<br />

26(3-4):64; 29(l):16; 3l(3-4) :32; 32(l-2) :31; 35(3-4) :31; <strong>38</strong>(3) :1; guest, 1(1) :2;<br />

lO(3) :49; 18(2) :25; 21(l) :l5; 23(2) :36<br />

editorial policy, 37(3-4) :35; <strong>38</strong>(3):34<br />

effigies, 24(3-4) :49; 36(1-2) :28<br />

engraved pebbles, 28(1) :15<br />

environment, 8(2) :29<br />

Eskimo settlement, 10(1):1<br />

ethnography, 16(2):29; (also see ethnohistory)<br />

ethnohistory, 1(4) :4; 3(2) :19; 3(3) :31; 3(4) :43; 4(1) :15; 4(3) :33; 4(4) :49; 6(1) :10;<br />

7(1) :11; 8(2) :17; 9(1) :9; 9(4) :80; 10(2) :17; 11(3) :48; 12(4) :58; 13(2) :6; 15(4) :59;<br />

18(4) :68; 19(4) :53; 20(1) :12; 20(3) :34; 22(2) :17; 24(3-4) :58; 25(3-4) :72; 29(3-4) :62<br />

31(1-2) :11; 35(3-4):25; <strong>38</strong>(1-2) :14<br />

ethnology, 6(3):39; 7(3) :59; 18(4) :68<br />

evolution, cultural, 35(3-4):31; human, 35(1-2) :31; 35(3-4) :33<br />

excavation, purpose <strong>of</strong>, 31(3-4) :32; techniques, 1(4) :23; 5(2) :29; 7(2) :42; 7(4):76;<br />

15(1) :21; 24(3-4) :68; 33(1-2) :29; <strong>38</strong>(1-2) :20<br />

exhibits, 14(3) :84; 14(3) :92; 31(3-4):8<br />

facial reconstruction, 33(1-2) :10<br />

faunal remains, 26(3-4):53<br />

fertilizer, fish, 31(3-4) :23<br />

fire technology, 31(3-4) :20<br />

fishhooks, 33(1-2) :20<br />

floor plans, 32(1-2):1<br />

folklore, Indian, 15(3) :52<br />

food storage, 23(3-4):47<br />

forts, 4(1) :1; 9(4) :82; 14(2) :79; 17(1) :9; <strong>38</strong>(1-2):7<br />

Fowler, William S., 37(3-4) :35<br />

functional analysis, 12(4) :62<br />

G<br />

geography, 5(3):33; 5(3):34<br />

geological methods, 12(3):41<br />

glacial erosion, 14(4) :112<br />

gorgets, 31(3-4) :30; 32(1-2) :33<br />

gouges, channeled, 25(2) :35; grooved, 34(3-4) :23<br />

graphite, use <strong>of</strong>, <strong>38</strong>(1-2) :30<br />

H<br />

hafting techniques, 1(4) :16; 2(1) :27; 21(3-4) :62; 30(2) :15; 34(3-4) :1; 37(3-4) :45<br />

harpoons, Indian, 30(3-4):22<br />

historic period sites, 4(3) :41; 6(2) :17; 11(1) :6; 16(3) :41; 16(3) :48; 28(3-4):33;<br />

<strong>38</strong>(1-2) :7<br />

historical narratives (see narrative reprints)<br />

history, <strong>of</strong> Maine, 2(4) :7; <strong>of</strong> New England, 1(3) :30; 3(2) :19; 3(3) :36; 4(4) :57; 4(4) :64;<br />

9(4):76; 11(2):19; 11(3):48; 16(3):41; 17(4):59<br />

hoes, triangular, 21(3-4):<strong>38</strong><br />

houses (see structures)<br />

humor, 9( 1) :14<br />

I<br />

illustration techniques, 25(2) :44<br />

indices, 8(4) :61; 17(special) :1; 18(4):80; 19(4):68; 20(4) :68; 23(3-4):51<br />

Indian, activities, 13(1) :11; agriculture, 22(3-4) :58; 31(1-2) :11; art, 13(1) :1; games,<br />

16(2) :25; languages, 22(3-4) :65; names, 22(2) :30; oils 21(2) :19; place names,<br />

21(3-4) :46; Rock, 30(3-4) :28<br />

Indians, Algowkian, 28(1) :4; Cape Cod, 19(4) :53; 22(2) :17; Housatonic, 19(3) :44; Long<br />

F


VOLUME <strong>38</strong>, NUMBER 4 29<br />

narrative reprints, 1(3):30; 1(4):11; 2(1):23; 3(3):36; 3(4):43; 4(1):15; 4(4):57;<br />

8(2) :17; 9(1):9<br />

New England (see archaeology <strong>of</strong> New England; history <strong>of</strong> New England), environment <strong>of</strong>,<br />

8( 2) : 29<br />

New Jersey (see archaeology <strong>of</strong> New Jersey; site reports, New Jersey)<br />

New York State (see archaeology <strong>of</strong> New York State; site reports, New York State)<br />

Nipmuc Chapter, 10(3):54<br />

Nipmuck territory, 2(4) :2; 2(4) :14; <strong>38</strong>(1-2) :14<br />

<strong>No</strong>rse runes, 21(2):22<br />

<strong>No</strong>r<strong>the</strong>ast (see archaeology <strong>of</strong> <strong>No</strong>r<strong>the</strong>ast)<br />

<strong>No</strong>r<strong>the</strong>astern Chapter, 10(3) :60<br />

<strong>No</strong>va Scotia, 20(3):39<br />

o<br />

obituaries, Jesse Brewer, 33(3-4) :28; Edward Brooks, 18(3) :64; Kirk Bryan, 12(1):12;<br />

Ripley P. Bullen, <strong>38</strong>(3) :33; Edmund Burke, 7(2) :48; Karl S. Dodge, 30(2) :17; W. Elmer<br />

Ekblaw, 10(4) :96; Laurence K. Gahan, 28(1) :15<br />

Oceanic artifacts, l2(3) :27; 13(4):<strong>38</strong><br />

Owasco ceramics, ll(2) :17<br />

P<br />

paleogeography, 4(2) :24; 34(1-2) :13<br />

Paleo-Indian, migrations, 23(2) :21; 34(1-2) :13; period, 13(4) :39; 16(1) :2; 18(3) :49;<br />

19(2):21; 20(3):33; 33(3-4):29; 34(1-2) :1; 34(1-2):6; 36(1-2):8<br />

Paleolithic archaeology, old world, 8(2):24<br />

pecking, function <strong>of</strong>, 31(1-2):30<br />

pestles, 31(1-2):26<br />

petroglyphs, 21(2):21; 22(1) :14; 37(3-4) :47<br />

petrography, 5(3):42; 11(2):45<br />

pipe making, stone, 29(1):1<br />

pipes, 37(3-4) :42; ceramic, 18(3) :55; 24(3-4) :53; 26(3-4):49; 35(3-4) :23; ceramic<br />

effigy, 35(1-2) :28; stone, 8(4) :49; 30(3-4) :26; 32(1-2) :23<br />

pipe stems, 4(3) :39<br />

pitted stones, 13(3):19<br />

place names, Indian, 10(4):89<br />

plummets, 36(3-4):31<br />

poetry, 1(4) :2; 7(4) :80; 10(2) :48; 18(4) :78<br />

Polynesian artifacts, 12(3):27<br />

pottery restoration, 30(3-4) :29<br />

Pre-Columbian markers, 28(1):10<br />

prehistoric movements, 22(3-4):62; 23(2):21; 34(1-2):13;(see also seasonal movements)<br />

property rights, 2(4):14; 11(3):48; 13(2) :6; <strong>38</strong>(1-2):14<br />

publicity, 21(1) :16<br />

Q<br />

quarry sites, 2(1):14; 2(2):20; 4(3):42; 5(4):49; 6(4):49; 22(3-4):49; 27(2):17;<br />

29(1):1; 30(1):6; 30(3-4):9; 31(1-2):1; 32(3-4):9; 33(3-4):18; 36(3-4):1; 36(3-4):17;<br />

<strong>38</strong>(3):34; <strong>38</strong>(3):48<br />

Quaternary period, 21(3-4):49<br />

R<br />

radiocarbon dating, l2(2):13; l4(4):105; 16(3) :53; 17(3):49; 18(1):1; 18(2) :26;<br />

19(2) :21; 20(3) :33; 28(1) :17; 29(1) :1; 30(3-4) :1; 34(1-2):1<br />

recording techniques, 24(3-4):68<br />

red ochre, ll(2):22; l5(3):58; l7(1) :4; 17(2) :18<br />

Rhode Island (see archaeology <strong>of</strong> Rhode Island; site reports, Rhode Island)<br />

rock identification, 20(1):8; (see also lithic analysis, stone identification)<br />

rock shelters, 8(1):6; 9(1):15; 10(1):16; 10(2):36; 22(3-4):56; 24(1):1; 30(2):1;<br />

30(2):10; 31(3-4) :16; 32(3-4) :9; 33(3-4) :16; 37(1-2) :20


32<br />

Boston Public Library<br />

Boston, MA<br />

Boston University Libraries<br />

Boston, MA<br />

Brandeis University Library<br />

Waltham, MA<br />

Bridgewater State College<br />

Bridgewater, MA<br />

Brooks Free Library<br />

Harwich, MA<br />

Brown University Library<br />

Providence, RI<br />

Bryn Mawr College Library<br />

Bryn Mawr, PA<br />

Cape Cod Museum <strong>of</strong> National History<br />

Brewster, MA<br />

Carnegie Museum Library<br />

Pittsburg, PA<br />

City College Library<br />

New York City, NY<br />

Concord Free Public Library<br />

Concord, MA<br />

Concordia Library<br />

Mont real, PQ<br />

Cornell University Libraries<br />

Ithaca, NY<br />

Cranbrook Institute <strong>of</strong> Science<br />

Bloomfield Hills, MI<br />

C.T.R. Research Libraries Journal Project<br />

Chicago, IL<br />

Dartmouth College, Baker Library<br />

Hanover, NH<br />

De Cordova Museum Library<br />

Lincoln, MA<br />

Dukes County Historical <strong>Society</strong><br />

Edgartown, MA<br />

Duxbury Free Library<br />

Duxbury, MA<br />

East Carolina College<br />

Greenville, NC<br />

THE MASSACHUSETTS ARCHAEOLOGICAL SOCIETY BULLETIN<br />

Emory University, Robert W. Woodruff Library<br />

Atlanta, GA<br />

Fairbanks Museum &Planetarium<br />

St. Johnsbury, VT<br />

Field Museum <strong>of</strong> Natural History<br />

Chicago, IL<br />

Franklin & Marshall College<br />

Lancaster, PA<br />

Fruitlands Museum, Inc.<br />

Harvard, MA<br />

The Gunnery School<br />

Washington, CT<br />

Haffenreffer Museum <strong>of</strong> Anthropology<br />

Bristol, RI<br />

Harvard University, Tozzer Memorial Library<br />

Cambridge, MA<br />

Haverhill Historical <strong>Society</strong><br />

Haverhill, MA<br />

Haverhill Public Library<br />

Haverhill, MA<br />

Historical Resource Development<br />

Provo <strong>of</strong> New Brunswick, Fredericton, NB<br />

The Incorporated Long Island Chapter, NYSAA<br />

Southold, NY<br />

Indian & Colonial Research Center<br />

r.trstic, CT<br />

Indiana University<br />

Bloomington, IN<br />

Kansas State University<br />

Manhattan, KS<br />

Manchester Historic Association<br />

Manchester, NH<br />

Mashpee Wampanoag Indian Museum<br />

Mashpee, MA<br />

Mass. Bay Community College<br />

Wellesly, MA<br />

Ministere des Affaires Culturelles<br />

Quebec, PQ<br />

Museum <strong>of</strong> Science<br />

Boston, MA

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