556 NEW YORK STATE MUSEUM 



later by Parker and Burmaster for the Njew York State Museum. 

 The property is the estate of H. Silverheels. Many clay vessels, 

 stone axes, flints, shell ornaments and bone implements were found. 

 The occupation is Seneca. 



70 Village site, early, at some distance north of the mouth of 

 Cattaraugus creek, where a road approaches the shore. This site 

 covers an area of about 10 acres and there are evidences of several 

 occupations. 



71 A mound in the reservation, just north of the Collins line. 



72 Village extensive on the Lay estate on the Cattaraugus reser- 

 vation, lots 17 and 31. This was a village of captive Delaware. 

 (See Ellicott's map of 1804.) 



73 Mound on lot 28, Brant, is near the Theodore Jemison farm 

 on the Cattaraugus reservation. 



74 Village site near and surrounding a mound on lot 28, is on a 

 hill leading up from the Gowanda-Irving road to the terrace. This 

 is near the Kenjockety and Jemison estates on the reservation. 



75 Camp site on the Barren estate, lot 41, on Delaware creek, 

 east of Brant Center. Leaf-shaped points and scrapers are reported. 



76 Camp site on the United States Preserving Company's prop- 

 erty, lot 52, Brant, between Big Sister and Delaware creeks. 



77 Camp on lot 5, reservation, in Brant township is on the south 

 side of the Gowanda-Irving road. 



78 Camp site in Brant, one-fourth of a mile from the Barron 

 estate site on the south side of Delaware creek. 



79 Camp site in Evans, lot 76, on the north bank of Big Sister 

 creek on the East line road. 



80 Camp site on lot 66, Evans, on the south side of Big Sister 

 creek, east of the Telegraph road. This is on the Harper property. 



8 1 L. W. Calver found a large workshop in the village of Wil- 

 liamsville, with local and foreign material. 



82 Camp site south of Springville near the Cattaraugus creek. 

 Some supplementary remarks may be made on Erie county, 



founded on the local collections of the Buffalo Society of Natural 

 Sciences. A string of rice shells, tinged with copper, came from a 

 grave on Barnard street. Village sites east and southeast of Buffalo 

 had early flint articles. Similar sites were north of the city, and 

 others in the Parkside district and on Seneca street and on the Abbott 

 road. A site on the Indian Church road was of a mixed character. 

 The articles were mostly of the Iroquois type but there were* early 



