﻿130 CATALOGUE OF PREHISTORIC WORKS. 



Jasper County- 

 Twenty or thirty mounds on Shoal Creek, a branch of Spring Eiver. 



Mentioued by W. S. Newlon, Sm. Rep., 1879, p. 433. 



Jefferson County. 



Small cemeteries (stone graves) in the neighborhood of Sulphur 

 Springs. 



Mentioned by C. C. Jones on the authority of Dr. Rau. Antiq. So. luds., p. 220. 



Johnson County. 



Mounds on the bluifs of Black Water Elver containing stone vaults. 

 Pottery and flint implements have been obtained from them. 



Described by G. C. Brodhead, Sm. Rep., 1879, p. 354. Marquis de Nadaillac in 

 Mat. pour I'Hlst. de L'Homme, vol. 19 (1885), p. 512, alludes to a sculptured 

 pipe taken from a stone cist near Warrensburgh. 



La Fayette County. 



Mound 8 miles southwest of Lexington. 

 Reported by Gerard Fowke. 



Lawrence County. 

 Mounds near Mount Vernon. 



Mentioned by I. S. Drake, Sm. Rep., 1879, p. 432. 



Lewis County. 



An oval mound 2 miles north of Canton on the point of a bluff facing 

 the Mississippi bottom. 

 Described in Report. 



Madison County. 



Ancient village sites, mounds, house sites, etc., on the headwaters 

 of the St. Francis River, in the vicinity of Mine La Motte. One was 

 located where Fredericktown now stands. 



I. Dille, Auc. Moil., pp. 136, 137. Also, Sm. Rep., 1866, p. 362. 



Mississippi County. . 



Inclosuro, ditch, mounds, and hut-rings, some of the mounds pyrami- 

 dal and quite large, on a low ridge known as Pinhook Ridge, about 10 

 miles southwest of Belmont. Other mounds occur in this neighborhood 

 for 2 or 3 miles south of the inclosure. 



Figured and described iu Report. The mounds alluded to by J. W. Foster as 

 being in Sec. 6, T. 24 N., R. 17 E., belong to those above mentioned; Sm. 

 Rep., 1803, pp. 383, 384. 



The " Myer's Mounds," a group of two, one pyramidal and terraced, 

 situated on the county road from Bird's Point to Charleston, about 

 midway between the two points. An ancient cemetery and other small 

 mounds in the vicinity. 



The first described and figured in Report. 

 Mounds near Charleston. 



Incidentally alluded to in Report, 



