i^io.] Recent Axcai^oLOGicAL I>a^sTiGATioNs in Ontario. 



LITERATURE. 



Boyle — "Annual Archieological Report," Ontario Education Department, 1897. 



Hodge, F. W. — " Handbook of American Indians," 1907. 



Lapham, I. A. — " Antiquities of Wisconsin," 1855. 



Holmes, W. H.— "Art in Shell," Report of U.S. Bureau of Ethnology, 1881. 



Mills — "Explorations of the Gartner Mound and Village Site," Columbus, Ohio, 1904. 



Mills— " Explorations of the Edwin Harness Mound," Ross County, Ohio, Columbus, 

 Ohio, 1907. 



Montgomery, Henry — "Indian Remains in Simcoe and Muskoka," The Daily Globe, 

 Toronto, August 28, 1878. 



Montgomery, Henry — "Aboriginal Monuments of North Dakota," Proceedings of 

 the American Association for the Advancement of Science, 1889. 



Montgomery — "Remains of Prehistoric Man in the Dakotas," American Anthropolo- 

 gist, Vol. 8, No. 4, 1906. 



Montgomery — "Prehistoric Man in Manitoba, and Saskatchewan," American An- 

 thropologist, Vol. 10, No. I, 1908. 



Montgomery — "Archaeology of Ontario and Manitoba," Transactions of British 

 Association for the Advancement of Science, 1909; and American Anthropolo- 

 gist, Vol. 11., No. 3, 1909. 



Montgomery^ — "The Stone Age in Eastern and Central Canada," The Stone Age, 

 by W. K. Moorehead, C. E. Brown and H. Montgomery; Houghton,^Mifl3in 

 & Co., Boston, 1910. 



Moore, Clarence B. — "Certain Mounds in Alabama," Philadelphia, 1906. 



Moore — "Antiquities of the Ouachita Valley," Philadelphia, 1909. 



Moorehead, W. K. — "Primitive Man in Ohio," New York and London, 1892. 



SquiER and Davis — "Ancient Monuments of the Mississippi Valley." 



Wilson, Daniel— "The Huron Indian Head- Form," Toronto, 1876. 



ILLUSTRATIONS. 



Fig. I. — Mound near the larger or eastern end of the so-called serpent mound. 



Fig. 2. — The highest and widest part of the "serpent" mound, showing oak trees 

 growing upon its summit. 



Fig. 3. — Marine shells, Oliva literata, full size, showing the spire top ground off. From 

 excavation 2 in the "serpent" mound, October, 1909. 



Fig. 4. — Marine shells, Marginella apicina, actual size, showing where the hole has 

 been made by grinding. From excavation No. 2 in "serpent" mound. 



