﻿220 CATALOGUE OF PREHISTORIC WORKS. 



Stone mounds on the farm of B. F. Harrison in same neigLbofbood 

 as the preceding-. 



J. P. Smith, 8m. Rep., 1882, pp.798, 799. 



Boone County. 

 Pictographs on a cliff at Horse Creek. 



Reported by John L. Cole. 



Brooke County. 



Burial cave or grotto on the Ohio, directly opposite Steubenville, 

 Ohio, on what was known as the " Mingo Bottom" from a former village 

 of Mingo Indians located here. An extensive collection of human 

 skeletons, also pots, va^es, etc., of earthenware, obtained here. 



Mentioned by an anonymous writer in Am. Jour. Sci. and Art, Istser., vol.31 

 (1837), pp. 8-10. 



Cabell County. 



Refuse heap extending for half a mile along the bank of the Ohio, 

 just above the moutli of the Guyandotte. 



Three small mounds in a held half a mile above the preceding. 



Traces of an inclosure and hamlet midway between Guyandotte and 

 Huntington, on a bottom high above the greatest floods. 



Group near Barboursville. 



Reported by P. W. Norris. 



Fayette County. 



Ancient stone wall at Mount Carbon. 



Described in Report. 

 Rock circle on Armstrong Creek, half a mile above its junction with 

 the Kanawha. 



Described and figured in Report. 



Eight mounds on Meadow River, a tributary of the Gauley. 



Mentioned by S. M. Campbell, Sm. Rep., 1879, p. 441. 



Ancient wall near the Chesapeake and Ohio Railroad, between Loup 

 and Armstrong Creeks, 1 mile from their confluence. 

 W.N. Page, Sm. Rep., 1879, p. 441. 



Ancient stone work on Beaver creek. 



Account given by Mr. I. Craig in the American Pioneer, vol. 1, p. 299. Men- 

 tioned in Anc. Mon., p. 14. 

 The " Huddleson Enclosure" on the farm of Mr. A. Huddleson across 

 the Kanawha from Mt. Carbon. 

 Described and figured in Report. 



" Kock etchings are numerous upon the smooth rocks near the princi- 

 pal fords of the river." 



Reported by P. W.. Norris. 



Rock circles are found on nearly all the prominent blufl"s, spurs, and 

 high points of this region. 



Described and figured in Report. 



Gilmer County. 

 T. M. Marshall reports mounds near Glenville. 

 Sm. Rep., 1879, p. 441. 



