226 PICTOGKAPHS OF THE NORTH AMERICAN INDIANS. 



Mr. Wall furnishes the following interpretation of the figures: 



A. Outline of a turkey. 



B. Outline of a panther. 



C. Outline of a rattlesnake. 



D. Outline of a human form. 



E. A '-spiral or volute." 



F. Impression of a horse foot. 



G. Impression of a human foot. 



H. Outline of the top portion of a tree or branch. 



I. Impression of a human hand. 



J. Impression of a bear's forefoot, but lacks the proper number of toe 

 marks. 



K. Impression of two turkey tracks. 



L. Has some appearance of a hare or rabbit, but lacks the correspond- 

 ing length of ears. 



M. Impression of a bear's hindfoot, but lacks the proper number of 

 toe marks. 



N. Outline of infant human form, with two arrows in the right baud. 



O, P. Two cup-shaped depressions. 



(}. Outline of the hind part of an animal. 



It. Might be taken to represent the impression of a. horse's foot were 

 it not for the line bisecting the outer curved line. 



S. Represent buffalo and deer tracks. 



The turkey A. the rattlesnake U, the rabbit L, and the "footprints" 

 ,1, M, and Q, are specially noticeable as typical characters in Algonkian 

 pictography. 



Mr. P. W. Sheafer furnishes in his Histoiical Map of Pennsylvania, 



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Fig. 149.— Algoukiau pefcroglypb. SatV Harbor, Pennsylvania. 



Philadelphia, 1875, a sketch of a pictograph on the Susquehanna River, 

 Pennsylvania, below the dam at Safe Harbor, part of which is repro- 



