﻿198 CATALOGUE OF PREHISTORIC WORKS. 



Lincoln County. 



Haystack Mouud, situated near the west fork of Little Sions, on 

 Turkey Creek. Opened j contained bones, pottery, ashes and charred 

 wood. 



Measurement, description and plat by A. Barrandt, Sin. Rep., 1872, pp. 413, 414. 



McCook County. 



Pictured rocks about 4 miles southwest of Bridgewater, in Wolf 

 Creek Valley. 



Reported by Prof. J. E. Todd. 



Minnehaha County. 



Several large groups of mounds, accompanied by stone circles and 

 an inclosure, 10 miles down the river from Sioux Falls. 

 Reported by F. W. Pettigrew. 



Potter County. 

 Human footprints in limestone bowlder rock, near Forest City. 



Reported by H. L. Reynolds. 



Roberts County. 



Earthwork and mounds about the Sisseton Agency. 



A. J. Comfort, Sm. Rep., 1871, pp. 389-402. Franli H. Nutter, Sm. Rep., 1879, 

 p. 426. 



Ancient rock inscriptions iu Eastern Dakota, as follows: Picto- 

 graphs constituting "Thunder bird's track," on a rock iu the Sisseton 

 and Wahpeton Reservation, 6 miles west of Brown's Valley, Minne- 

 sota. Also another, 2 miles east of the above. 



Described by T. H. Lewis, Am. Nat., vol. 20 (1886), pp. 423-425. 



Mounds, forts, and other earthworks, on Big Stone and Traverse 

 Lakes; pictographs in the vicinity. 



Described by T. H. Lewis in Am. Nat., vol. 20 (1886), pp.*423-425, and vol. 21 

 (1887), p. 639-642. 



Spink County. 



A circular depression with four bowlders on the rim, at the four 

 poiuts of the compass, in T. 116 N., K. 05 W. 

 Reported by Prof. J. E. Todd. 



Todd County. 



Site of an ancient Indian village and graveyard on the north side of 

 the Niobrara River, 12 miles from its mouth. 



Short description by J. R. Nissley, Am. Autiq., vol. 9, pp. 303, 304. 



"Walworth County. 



Large circular depressions (house sites) and about one hundred quad- 

 rangular depressions surrounded by a wall from 5 to 10 feet high. 

 Explored ; contained charred and rotted wood, potsherds and shells, 

 implements of stone and bone, and human and animal bones. 

 Le Beau (Dakota) Pioneer, October 31, 1886. 



