176 ARCHAEOLOGY OF MICHIGAN. 



Xov. 1, 1905, Nov. 11, 1905, Dec. 17, 1905, and Dec. 



30, 1905, refers to graves at Bridgeport, Saginaw 

 County. 



May, 1907, mentions graves at Bridgeport, Saginaw 



County. 



Saginaw Evening News, June 1, 1888, refers to Saginaw Grave. 



December 31, 1902, mentions Edinger collection. 



September 23, 1909, mentions a grave in Berrien 



County. 



Saur^ (Wm. C). Illustrated Atlas of Kalamazoo County, MicM- 

 gari, with Early and Present History, Detroit, Mich., 

 1890, p. 79, refers to garden beds. 



Schoolcraft^ (Henry E.). Historical and Statistical Iftformation 

 respecting the History, Conditions and Prospects of 

 the Indian Trihes of the United States, Lippincott^ 

 Grambo & Company, 1851-1857, Vol. I, pp. 50-54-60 

 with plates VI and VII, refer to garden beds in the 

 Grand River Valley. 



Science, February 21, 1902, p. 309, refers to Hauptman Earthwork 

 in Ogemaw County. 



Short^ ( -) . North Americans of Antiquity, pp. 89-92, mentions 



copper mines in Ontonagon County. 



Smith, (HarIvAn L). The Antiquities of Michigan Their Taliie 

 and Impending Loss. John F. Elby & Co., Detroit, 

 Michigan. A reprint of a syndicated article which 

 appeared in the Detroit Evening News and the Detroit 

 Free Press. 



Prehistoric Michigan, Popular Science News, May, 



1901, pp. 110-111. 



Also reprint. 



An Archaeological Survey of Michigan, Third Re- 

 port of the Michigan Academy of Science, 1901, pp. 

 35-37. 



Also separate. 



Archaeological Survey of Michigan. Presented be- 

 fore the Michigan Academy of Science at its seventh 

 annual meeting, Ann Arbor, March 28, 1901, pp. 198- 

 200. 



'■ American Anthropologist, N. S., Vol. Ill, January- 

 March, 1901. This paper with slight changes the 

 same as "An Archaeological Survey of Michigan." 



Also reprint. 



