THE AMERICAN BISONS. 107 
Ohio, along the southern shore of Lake Erie, particularly towards its western 
end. La Hontan, in his.description of Lake Erie, as he saw it about 1687, 
says: “Icannot express what quantities of Deer and Turkeys are to be found 
in these Woods, and in the vast Meads that lye upon the South side of the 
Lake. At the bottom of the Lake, we find beeves upon the Banks of two 
pleasant Rivers that disembogue into it, without Cataracts or rapid Cur- 
rents.”* Vaudreuil, describing Lake Erie in 1718, says: “There is no need of 
fasting on either side of this lake, deer are to be found there in such abun- 
dance; buffaloes are found on the south, but not on the north shore.” Again 
he says: “Thirty leagues up the [Maumee] river is a place called La Glaise 
[now Defiance, Ohio], where buffaloes are always to be found; they eat the 
clay and wallow in it.” The occurrence of a stream in Western New York 
called Buffalo Creek, which empties into the eastern end of Lake Erie, is 
commonly viewed as traditional evidence of its occurrence at this point, 
but positive testimony to this effect has thus far escaped me. This locality, 
if it actually came so far eastward, must have formed the eastern limit of 
its range along the lakes. > 
I have found only highly questionable allusions to the occurrence of 
buffaloes along the southern shore of Lake Ontario. Keating, on the 
authority of Colhoun, however, has cited a passage from Morton’s “ New 
English Canaan” as proof of their former existence in the neighborhood 
of this lake. Morton’s statement is based on Indian reports, and the con- 
text gives sufficient evidence of the general vagueness of his knowledge of 
the region of which he was speaking. The passage, printed in 1637, is as 
follows: “They [the Indians] have also made descriptions of great heards 
of well growne beasts that live about the parts of this lake [Erocoise], such 
as the Christian world (untill this discovery) hath not bin made acquainted 
with. These Beasts are of the bignesse of a Cowe, their flesh being very 
good foode, their hides good lether, their fleeces very usefull, being a kinde of 
wolle, as fine almost as the wolle of the Beaver and the Salvages doe make 
garments thereof. It is tenne yeares since first the relation of these things 
came to the eares of the English.”§ The “beast” to which allusion is here 
made is unquestionably the buffalo, but the locality of Lake “ Erocoise” is 
* La Hontan, New Voyages to North America, English ed., Vol. I, p. 217. 
+ New York Coll. MSS., Paris Documents, VI, pp. 885, 891. 
t Long’s Expedition to the Source of St. Peter’s River, ete., Vol. II, p. 25. 
§ Morton (Thomas), New English Canaan, p. 98, Amsterdam, 1637. 
