﻿28 CATALOGUE OF PREHISTORIC WORKS. 



New London County. 



Mobegau biiryiug- ground in Norwich, close by the falls of Yautic 

 Kiver. 



Mentioned in Drake's Indians of North America, 15tb edition, 18G0, p. 152. 



DELAWARE. 



New Castle County. 



Mound on Middle tSouud, about 10 miles east of Wilmington. Ex- 

 plored, contained bones, coals, and fragments of pottery. 



Described in Am. Autiq., vol. 1 (1878), p. 16(3. Extract from Wilmington (Del.) 

 Star, Jnue 22, 1875. 



Sussex County. 



Shell heaps at Cape Henlopen. 



Mentioned and notices of articles fonud, 15th Rep. Peab. Mns., p. 79. 



DISTRICT OF COLUMBIA. 



Ancient quarries near Washington. 



Described b^' Elmer R. Reynolds, 12tb Rep. Peab. Mns., pp. 520-.535. Noticed 

 bj' F. W. Pntnam in same report, p. 475. 

 Prehistoric remains in the vicinity of Washington. 



T. R. Peale, Sm. Rep., 1872, pp. 430-432. W. H. Holmes, Am. Anthropologist, vol. 

 3, pp. 1-28. 



Ancient village sites and aboriginal workshops. 



S. V. Proudfit in Am. Anthrop., vol. 2, pp. 241-246 (1889). 

 Aboriginal workshops. 



Coutribntions to the Arch.Teologj^ of the District of Colnmbia, by Louis E. 

 Kengla. Pamph. (1883). 



FLORIDA. 

 Alachua County. 



The " Peter G. Snowden Mounds," 3 miles southeast of Gainesville. 



Described in Report. 

 Mound and inclosure on Captain Johnson's farm near Fish Prairie, 

 east of Micanopy and north of Orange Lake. 

 Reported by John P. Rogan. 

 Mounds in the neighborhood of Payne's Prairie, not far from the 

 Florida Railroad, and within 20 miles of Gainesville. Pottery and 

 human bones in large quantities. 



Figured and described by James Bell, Sm. Rep., 1881, pp. 63.5-637. Reported 

 also by John P. Rogan. 

 Burial mound on the shore of Cade's Pond, about 2 miles northeast 

 of Santa Fe Lake. 



Examined and described by Henry Gillman, Proc. Am. Assoc. Adv. Sci., vol. 27 

 (1878), pp. 309-311, and Am. Nat., vol. 12 (1878), p. 753. 

 Mention of a burial mound, and pottery therefrom, on the south 

 side of Santa Fe Lake. 



Henry Gillman, Am. Nat., vol. 12 (1878), pp. 821, 822. 



The " Widow McPherson Mound," 2 miles southwest of Gainesville. 



