﻿CANADA. 25 



Mounds, 3 miles northeast of West Point, on the north side of Little 

 Red River. Pottery fragments, mussel shells, and burnt clay were 

 found. 



Eeported by Dr. Palmer. 



Woodruff County. 



Mound on White River, 5 miles below the mouth of Little Red River, 

 on the east side, near Negro Hill. Explored. 



Mounds at Cotton Plant. 



The " Mayberry Mounds," 3 miles east of Cotton Plant, on the May- 

 berry farm. 



Eeported by Dr. Palmer. 



DOMINION OF CANADA. 



MANITOBA. 



Pottery and stone workshop ; definite location not given. Articles 

 of stone, shell, and pottery found. 



Explored and described by C. M. Bell, Chicago Journal, October 12, 18S5, from 

 an article in the Montreal Gazette; also New York Evening Post, March 

 13, 1886. 



Mounds along the northern shore of Rock Lake, in the southern part 

 of the province. 



Two small mounds near East Selkirk, on the right bank of the Red 

 River of the North. 



Mounds on the Assiniboine River, near its junction with Red River, 

 Now obliterated. 



Many mounds and embankments along the Souris River for several 

 miles north of the boundary line and along its tributaries, the North 

 and South Antlers. 



Reported by H. L. Reynolds. 



Mounds along the western bank of Red River, between Selkirk and 

 St. Andrews, about 18 miles north of Winnipeg; partially examined ; 

 yielded articles of stone, bone, clay, and human and animal bones. 



Brief description in Chicago Journal, October 10, 1P85. C. M. Bell, Am. Antiq., 

 vol, 8 (1886), p. 108. Mentioned by T. H. Lewis in Am. Antiq., vol. 8 

 (1886), p. 370. 



"Calf Mountain" (Tete de Bceuf), a mound 95 feet in diameter and 

 15 feet high, with a graded roadway 2 feet high, running southwest 

 from it 154 feet; about 60 miles north of Pembina. 



Described by Alexander Henry, a trader, in 1806; also by Captain Palliser, the 

 British trader, in 1857; and by the British explorers, Hand and Dawson, 

 in 1882. T. H. Lewis, Am. Antiq., vol. 8, pp. 369,370. 



NOVA SCOTIA. 



Pictou County. 



Mound at Campbell's Point, containing bones and stone implements. 

 Prehistoric cemetery. 



Reported by Rev. Geo. Patterson, Sm. Rep., 1881, p. 074. 



