SURVEY mately an eighth of a mile southward into Lameshur Bay. Its sides are a jumble of fallen rock and steep angles around which the swell splashes and eddies. The top has only enough rocky soil to support cactus and thornbush. On this surface we obtained 46 weathered sherds, Site 11. Troweling produced nothing below the two or three inches of soil-patches scattered over the surface of the point. Plate VI. Petroglyphic Group, Site 13, Reef Bay Valley. Reef Bay: The valley dropping into Reef Bay is well known for the petroglyphic site reported by de Booy, Hatt, and others. This site is in the upper reaches of a tributary valley draining the eastern slopes of Camelberg Peak and neighboring mountains. The vicinity of the site, Site 13 of the survey, is a tangle of vegeta- tion watered by what appears to be a continual although small flow of fresh water over a rock exposure into a series of several pools. Except during times of heavy runoff, this stream soon dis-