﻿192 CATALOGUE OF PREHISTORIC WORKS. 



Luzerne County. 



Mound at Nautic'oke where the Indians bury their dead. 

 Repoiteil bj^ J. B. Wiggins, Sin. Rep., 1881, p. Gd(). 



Large mound at Wyoming, said to have been raised by the Dehiwares 

 over the dead who fell in the " Grasshopper war." 

 Anuals of Binghamtou (1840), p. 173. 



Lycoming or Clinton County. 



Circular fortification just above Pine Creek and north of the road to 

 Lock Haven, on the county line. Ancient burying ground in the 

 vicinity. 



Day's Hist. Coll. Pa. (1843), pp. 54, .5.5. Brief mention in Warden's Recherch., 

 p. 18. 

 Ancient luclosure, elliptical inform, on Loyalsock Creek. 

 Brief mention in Warden's Recherch., p. 18. 



Mifflin County. 



Burial mound near the junction of Kishacoquillas Creek with the 

 Juniata Itiver, near Lewistown. 



Mentioned by S. G. Shannon and John Swartzeli, Sm. Rep., 1879, p. 446. 



Monroe County. 



Indian grave near the Delaware water-gap. 



Mentioned by E. A. Barljer, Am. Nat., vol. 13 ( 1879), p. 297. 



Northampton County, 



An ancient stone inclosure a half mile west from Danielsville. 

 An Indian village site in the vicinity of Cherry ville. 



The former fully described and the latter mentioned by A. F. Berlin, Am. Antiq., 

 vol. 9, No. 9, pp. 311, 312. 



Northumberland County. 



A stone mound 30 feet in diameter and 8 feet high on the Susque- 

 hanna, near Milton. 



Mentioned in Warden's Recherch. (1834), p. 18. 



Tioga County. 



Ancient remains near Tioga Creek and near the New York line. 



Brietlj' mentioned in Warden's Recherch., p. 18. 



Venango County. 



Inscribed rock called " Indian God," about 5 miles south of Frank- 

 lin, on the left bank of the Alleghany River. 



Described and (ignred in Day's Hist. Coll. Pa. (1843), pp. 638, 639. 

 Imlian graves in the vicinity of Franklin and Cooperstown, and 

 remains of Indian villages at the mouth of Oil Creek and along French 

 Creek. 



Day's Hist. Coll. Pa., pp. 638,639. 

 Cave in which relics have been found opposite Oleopolis. 

 Noticed in the Hist, Mag., 2d ser., vol. 2 (1887), p. 178, 



