632 \ic\v YORK STATIC MUSEUM 



3 Burial site at the Lewiston end of the electric road. Pipes and 

 arrowheads were found. Mr Larkin mentioned two large burial 

 mounds in this town. 



4 Burial place on the Way farm, mentioned by Houghton, p. 323. 



5 Earthwork and village site on lot 61 in Lewiston township and 

 on the Tuscarora reservation. This is the site of the famous Kienuka 

 (Ga-yen-no-ga), the capitol town of the Neuters. It is situated on 

 a rocky ridge on the "mountain." Neaiby are two mounds, a burial 

 place and two ossuaries. 



6 Pits one-fourth of a mile west of Kienuka. The Bureau of 

 Ethnology reports one hundred and eighteen of these pits. 



7 Ossuaries, three in number, one-half of a mile west of Kienuka. 



8 Camp site in Pendleton on lot 42 one-half of a mile west of 

 Pickards bridge. This site is on the Dennison farm. 



9 Burial site of the W. C. Briggs estate near the school. 



10 There are traces of Indian graves on Goat island (French, 

 p. 450). Peter A. Porter gives information also concerning this site. 



11 Camp site on Cayuga island. There are refuse pits and store 

 relics, including notched points^ 



12 Mound on Lake Ontario and near Eighteen Mile creek, men- 

 tioned by Turner (p. 26). 



13 A mound in the town of Wilson contained human bones, and 

 was 10 or 12 feet high and 100 feet around. It was three-fourths 

 of a mile from the lake (Macauley, 2:113). 



14 Village site on lot 43 on the shore of Lake Ontario, west of 

 the mouth of Eighteen Mile creek. 



15 A mound, .fort and cemetery were on a ridge on lot 44 in 

 Cambria, 8 miles east of the reservation. Turner saw the mound 

 opened in 1823. Six acres were occupied, with a wall in front on 

 the circular verge of the mountain. In the center was an ossuary 



4 or 5 feet deep "filled with human bones, over which were slabs 



5 feet. The sites of habitations are marked by remains of pottery, 

 pipes and other evidences" (Turner, Hoi., p. 26). Schoolcraft 

 gives a plan and description but it may refer to a mere rocky ledge 

 with a village site. General Lincoln gave an account of the two 

 Tuscarora villages at that place in 1/93. Land had been cleared 

 and they found " a wall around it, the banks of which were visible at 

 this time." Stone axes were obtained (Mass.. Hist.. 5: 127). Tin' 

 may have been the work examined by Mr Reynolds on the no 

 line of the reservation. Its area was i 1 /* acres and there was no wa 

 on the north. A recent monumental stone heap was near it (U. S. 

 Bur. of Eth., p. 512). The site is on the Benjamin Gould property. 



