ELGART MIAMI CIRCLE ANIMAL FEATURES 189 1936 ‘Florida Cultural Affiliations in Relationship to Adjacent Areas. In Essays in Anthropology in Honor of Alfred Louis Kroeber, pp. 351-357. University of California Press, Berkeley. Swanton, John R. 1946 = The Indians of the Southeast U.S. Smithsonian Institution Bureau of American Ethnology Bulletin 137. Van der Klift, Heleen M. 1992 Faunal remains of Golden Rock. In The Archaeology of St. Eustatius: the Golden Rock Site, edited by Aad H. Versteeg and Kees Schinkel, pp. 74-83. Publication No. 2, St. Eustatius Historical Foundation, St. Eustatius and Publica- tion No. 131, Foundation for Scientific Research in the Caribbean Region, Amsterdam. Walker, W.H. 1995 Ceremonial Trash? In Expanding Archaeology, edited by James M. Skibo, W.H. Walker, and A.E. Nielsen, pp. 67-79. University of Utah Press, Salt Lake City. Wheeler, Ryan J. 1992a Time, Space and Aesthetics: Decorated Bone Artifacts from Florida. Unpublished Master’s thesis, Department of Anthropology, University of Florida, Gainesville. 1992b The Riviera Complex: an East Okeechobee archacological area settlement. The Florida Anthropologist 45(1):5-17. 1996 Ancient Art of the Florida Peninsula: 500 B.C. to A.D. 1763. Ph.D. dissertation, Department of Anthropology, University of Florida, Gainesville. 2000a The Archaeology of Brickell Point and the Miami Circle. The Florida Anthropologist 53(4):294-322. 2000b = Treasure of the Calusa. Monographs in Florida Archaeol- ogy Number I. Rose Printing, Inc., Tallahassee. 2004a Bone artifacts from the Miami Circle at Brickell Point (8DA12). The Florida Anthropologist 57(1-2):133-158. 2004b = =Miami Circle at Brickell Point: National Historic Landmark Nomination. Prepared by the Florida Division of Historical Resources, Florida Department of State, Tallahassee. Wheeler, Ryan J., and Robert S. Carr 2004 The Miami Circle: Fieldwork, Research and Analysis. The Florida Anthropologist 57 (1-2):3-10. Wheeler, Ryan J., James P. Pepe, and William J. Kennedy 2002 The Archaeology of Jupiter Inlet 1 (8PB34). The Florida Anthropologist 55(3-4):157-191. Widmer, Randolph J. 2004 Archaeological investigations at the Brickell Point Site, 8DA12, Operation 3. The Florida Anthropologist 57 (1- 2):11-58. Willey, Gordon R 1949 Excavations in Southeast Florida. Yale University Publica- tions in Anthropology #42, New Haven, Connecticut. Wing, Elizabeth S., and L. Jill Loucks 1982 Granada Site faunal analysis. In Excavations at the Granada Site: Archaeology and History of the Granada Site, Volume 1, edited by John W. Griffin, pp. 259-345. Florida Division of Archives, History and Records Management, Tallahassee. Appendix 1: Dolphin cranium details Most of the ventral-facing vault of the skull, consisting of the maxilla, frontal, and parietal bones is present, but most of the rostrum (consisting of the maxilla and premaxilla superi- orly, and mandible inferiorly) and all of the teeth are missing. The mid section of the cranium is missing, but portions of the maxillary-frontal suture are present, and the suture is fused, indicating maturity. The inferior aspect of the left frontal bone is present, creating the superior orbital. Both of the comma- shaped, asymmetrical nasal bones are present on the frontal aspect of the skull. The left nasal bone is bigger, which is not unusual for dolphins (Iablokov et al. 1974). Laterally, part of the right temporal and the superior aspect of the left temporal are present. Most of the right and left parietal bones on the superior aspect of the skull are present. The width across the parietals is approximately 120 mm. The dorsal skull, consisting of the occipital bone, is nearly complete. Both occipital condyles are present, but the foramen magnum is incomplete. There are fragments of the inferior portion of the skull, but none articulate to the vault.