SUPPLEMENTARY NOTE. 



While treating in these pages of primitive American sculptures bear- 

 ing some analogy to those observed in the Old World, I omitted to mention 

 the incised rock in Forsyth County, Georgia, briefl}^ described and figured 

 by Colonel Charles C. Jones on pages CA and 65 of the "Journal of the An- 

 thropological Institute of New York" (Vol. I, New York, l.S71-'72). The 

 subjoined illustrations are those published by Colonel Jones, who kindly 

 loaned me the wood-cuts. 



South side of the .above. 



Here follows his description : — 



"In Forsyth County, Georgia, is a carved or incised boulder of fine- 

 grained granite, about nine feet long, four feet six inches high, and three 

 feet broad at its widest point. The figures are cut in tlie boulder from 

 one-half to three-quarters of an inch deep. 



