CONTENTS. 



PART II.— NORTH AMERICA. 



PAGE. 



Introductory Remarks . . ■ • • • • • • • • • "3 



Fishing-implements and Utensils n7 



Double-pointed straight Bait-holders . n? 



Fish-hooks 120 



Harpoon and Arrow-heads . • . . . • • . • • 141 



Nets 155 



Sinkers 156 



Fish-cutters ...,......••• 183 



Boats and Appurtenances 188 



Boats iS« 



Bailing-scoops ............ 190 



Paddles 191 



Anchor-stones . . . . • . . • . • • • 192 



Prehistoric Structures connected with Fishing 197 



Fish- preserves . . . . . . . . . . • • 197 



Fish-pens 200 



Representations of Fishes, Aquatic Mammals, etc 204 



Pipes 205 



Imitations in Stone and Shell ......... 206 



Clay Vessels 211 



Delineations . . . . . . . . . . . . 213 



Artificial Shell-deposits 216 



Introductory Notices . . . . , . . . . . . 216 



Greenland . . . . . . . . . . . . • 218 



Nova Scotia ............. 221 



New Brunswick and New England ........ 222 



New York . . . . . . . . . . . . . 225 



New Jersey ............. 227 



Delaware ............. 230 



Maryland 235 



West Virginia ............ 239 



Ohio 241 



Tennessee ............. 241 



Iowa .............. 241 



Georgia ............. 242 



Florida ............. 243 



Alabama ............. 249 



California and Oregon ........... 249 



Alaska .............. 256 



Extracts from various Writings of the Sixteenth, Seventeenth, Eighteenth, and 

 Nineteenth Centuries, in which Reference is made to Aboriginal Fishing in 



North America ............. 261 



Egede (Hans) ............ 261 



Crantz (David) ............ 261 



Lloyd (T. G. B.) 266 



De Laet (Joannes) ........... 267 



