﻿54 CATALOGUE OF PREHISTORIC WORKS. 



Stoue cainis at same gap. 



Reported by J. M. Spainhour. 



Stone cairns on east bank of Hottely River, midway between Arku- 

 qua and Town Creeks. Largest, originally 15 feet high. 

 Stone cairn 1 mile west of Blairsville in '' Wimpey Field." 

 Mound on extreme head of Brasstown Creek south of Blairsville road. 

 Reported by James Mooney. 



White County. 



Three mounds in Nacoochee Valley, on headwaters of Chattahoochee, 

 on the Nichols, Williams, and Johnson farms. Two of them very large 

 and perfect. 



Reported by James Moouey. Mentioned also by White, Hist. Coll. Ga., pp. 

 486, 487 ; Jones, Ant. So. Inds., pp. 213-215. 



Stone cairns on ridge, 1 mile west of Tray Mountain. 

 Mound on east side of Sautee Creek, 1 mile above Chickamauga 

 Creek. 



Reported by James Mooney. 



Subterranean or buried village "on Duke's Creek, 4 miles from Na- 

 coochee Valley.*' 



Described in White's Hist. Coll. Ga., pp. 487, 488; and Jones' Ant. So. Inds., p. 48. 



'' Rock walls on Mount Yonah." 



Noticed by Jones, Ant. So. Inds., p. 208. (" Probably the large stone circle on 

 Aleck Mountain in Habersham County, a few miles to the east." James 

 Mooney. ) 



Wilkes County. 



Ancient remains consisting of inclosures, mounds, and excavations, 

 some miles above Wrightsborough, on the north side (f Little River. 



Mentioned by Bartram, Travels, pp. 37, 38; C. C. Jones, Antiq. So. Inds., p. 

 123. 



ILLINOIS. 



Adams County. 



Mounds near Quincy along the banks of the Mississippi River ; con- 

 tained skeletons, pottery, ornaments, etc. 



Described by William G. Anderson, Sm. Rep., 1879, pp. 341-343. 



Mounds on the Illinois side of the Mississippi River, opposite Canton, 



Missouri. 



Brief description in Report. 



Mounds 5 miles below Canton, Missouri, on the Illinois side of the 

 Mississippi River, on the western shore of a little lake. 



Explored by P. W. Norris. Described in Report. 



Alexander County. 



Stone graves in Sec. 14, T. 14 S., R. 3 W. 



Explored by L. H. Thing. Described in Report. 

 " Hale Mounds." Mounds containing stone graves, and a refuse heap, 

 in the extreme northeast corner of the county, half a mile below Mill 



