﻿PENNSYLVANIA. 191 



Ancient fort on the nortli side of Mountz Creek, above Irislunan's 

 Kim; another on the suuiniit of Laurel Hill ; one on the high hind be- 

 tween Laurel Eun and Youghiogheny liiver; one a mile e;istof Union- 

 town; one 2 miles northeast of Geneva, and one on tlie Alexander 

 Wilson tract. 



Mentioned by Eev. Horace Hayden, Sm. Kep., 1881, pp. (■)3'J-64]. 



Stone heaps and mounds at Belle Vernon. 

 Petroglyphs opposite Millsboro. 

 Reported by Gerard Fowke. 



Forest County. 



Mounds at East Hickory, on C. R. Middleton's farm. 

 Burial ground below the mouth of West Hickory Creek, about a mile 

 below the railroad station. 



Reported by James D. Middleton, ^ 



Fulton County. 



An Indian graveyard on Scrub Ridge Mountain, V miles southwest 

 of McConnellsburgh. 



Reported by James I). Middleton. 



Greene County. 



jNlouiid 2i miles above the mouth of the creek opposite Millsborougb, 

 Washington County. 



Reported by Gerard Fowke. 



Indiana County. 



" Un Mole carre de deux acres " at the junction of Black Lick Creek 

 with the Conemaugh. 



Mentioned in Warden's Recherch. (1854), p. 18, 



Lancaster County. 



Di'[)osit of Indian relics in a cave or rock shelter at the west side of 

 Cluck's Rock. 



C. C. Abbott, Am. Nat., a^oI. 10 (1876), pp. 241, 242.^ 

 "Dekonaga," an Indian village, the site of which is now occupied by 

 Bainbridge, at the mouth of Coney Creek, 9 miles above Columbia. 

 Numerous relics have been discovered here. 

 Day's Hist. Coll. Pa. (1843), p. 410. 

 Group of stone mounds a few miles south of Safe Harbor. One 

 examined contained stone cist but no remains. 



Described by C. H. Binkley, Am. Antiq., vol. 3 (1880-1881), pp. i;)l, l'J2. 



La^vrence County. 



Mound and site of the old Indian village of Kush-kush-kee, near New 

 Castle. 



Explored and described by E. M. McCouiiel, Sin. Rep., 1871, pp. 40(;, 407. He 

 also notices a lew graves near by, >V. M. Taylor, Sm. Rep., 1877, pp, 306^ 

 307. 



