532 MISCELLANEOUS PAPERS RELATING TO ANTHROPOLOGY. 



action of fire on the stones, so far as we could discover, neither were 

 there any bones or implements found in the mound, although we dug 

 down 3 feet below the layer of stone. There were a few chips of flint 

 found on the ground around the base of the mound, and a large stone 

 implement which the writer thinks may have been used for a hoe, but 

 belonged to a later tribe than the one which built the mound." (See 

 Fig. 1.) Two cemeteries are also found in the county, but no examina- 

 tion has as vet been made. 



DESCEIPTION OF MOUNDS AT SNAKE DEN, NEAK SALEM, 

 HENEY COUNTY, IOWA. 



By \V. V. Banta and John Garbetson, of Salem, Iowa. 



There are many unexplored mounds in Henry County, Iowa. The 

 group examined and here described are 3 miles west of Salem, in sec- 

 tion 22, on land owned by Mr. Joel Jones, at a place known as the Snake 

 Den. 



1. The first one in the group is 8 feet high, and 20 feet in diameter. It 

 was opened by the authors, but nothing of value was discovered within. 

 A burr-oak 26 inches in diameter was growing on the summit. The land 

 slopes gradually westward to Little Cedar Creek. 



2. Sixty feet from No. 1 occurs a burial mound nearly level with the 

 surrounding surface and 20 feet across. It is covered with flat rocks. 

 (A large quantity of bones of all sizes were encountered, but none of them 

 were whole, and some appear to have been burned.) 



3. No. 3 is 60 feet from No. 2. It is 3 feet high. It was not very 

 thoroughly opened. In it was found one body, lying at length, between 

 flag-stones, the head toward the north. The bones were badly decayed. 



4. This mound is the usual distance from the last mentioned.* Indeed, 

 to avoid repetition, it is a remarkable fact that each of the mounds in 

 this row is just 60 feet from the preceding. This mound was 3 feet 

 high and 20 feet in diameter. It was but partially opened, and three 

 skeletons were found, badly decayed, lying at length, the heads to the 

 north. 



5. The fifth mound in the series is 5 feet high and 20 feet in diameter. 

 The top was covered with smooth, flat rocks, arranged in the shape of an 

 elongated hexagon or coffin lid, with stones set edgewise around the 

 border. Five feet beneath the top, that is, on a level with the natural 

 surface, two bodies were lying at full length, the heads toward the north. 



6. The sixth mound was not opened. It is 30 feet in diameter and 5 

 feet high. 



7. The next in order, No. 7, is also 5 feet high and 20 feet in diameter. 

 It was only partially explored, revealing a few human bones. On the 

 top there are two trees growing, one of them 2 feet in diameter. 



8. No. 8 is 5 feet high and 30 feet in diameter. It had been opened 



