6l2 NEW YORK STATE MUSEUM 



1 8 Camp site on the Wads worth farm south of Rochester and 

 across from Genesee Valley Park. 



19 Village site along Allen creek near the west line of Wheatland. 



20 Site showing occupation on the Wingate farm north of Church- 

 ville. Mr Follett, who examined the place in 1915, found three 

 large charcoal pits and a few arrowheads. 



21 Village site now obliterated in the present village of Church- 

 ville. Evidences were formerly seen on the surface at the West 

 Shore crossing. 



22 Village and burial site near Maplcwood west of the B. R. and 

 P. tracks and near the headwaters of a small stream. The burials 

 are located in a sand knoll. The only object found in the graves, 

 so far as records show, is a pottery pipe, discovered by Mr D'Olier 

 of Rochester. 



23 Village or large camp site near Genesee Junction, north of 

 Black creek and in the angles of the Pennsylvania and West Shore 

 Railroad tracks. 



24 Small village site north of Scottsville, in Chili township and 

 along the Genesee river. This is just east of Severance. 



25 Refuse heap discovered and excavated in 1910, in the city of 

 Rochester. 



26 Burial site on Ridgeway avenue, Rochester, excavated by 

 George Rodman Mills. Thirteen skeletons were found in an ossuary. 



27 Village site on the George H. Lee farm, 2 miles south of Greece 

 on the hill north of the canal and east of the road. 



28 Semicircular embankment, the ends of which extend to a deep 

 ravine. Squier says it had three narrow gateways at irregular inter- 

 vals. This was in the city of Rochester on the west bank of the 

 Genesee near the lower bridge. There was also a village site here. 



29 Village site on the west side of the Genesee river near mouth. 



30 Village site just south of this between the side tracks. 



31 Village site reported by Harris. 



32 Village site reported by Harris. 



33 Camp grounds near a break in the cliff on the east bank of the 

 Genesee, one-half of a mile below the lower fall. This makes a 

 natural landing place which attracted camps. There were two 

 mounds not over 100 feet from the edge of the bluff, which have been 

 leveled, but skeletons and relics have been found. This is Brewer's 

 landing, one-half of a mile north of Hanford's, which is on the 

 other shore (Harris, p. 23-26). 



34 Mound now obliterated. 



35 Burial site near the foot of Irondequoit bay above the pleasure 

 park. Turner records that in 1796 the bank caved off here, expos- 



