ON THE NOETH-WESTERN TRIBES OF CANADA. 



449 



Page 705, col 

 705, 

 70C, 

 707, 

 707, 

 707, 

 707, 

 708, 

 708, 

 709, 

 710, 

 711, 

 714, 

 715, 



umn salt, 

 deer, 

 wliite, 

 bird, 

 fish, 



light blue, 

 great, 

 strong, 

 he, 

 dead, 

 near, 

 six, 



to kill, 

 to lie down 



dialect li, instead of ts'alt 

 g'at 



1, 



15, 



17, 



1, 



15, 



2, 



5, 



15, 



9, 



8, 



15, 



18, 



tledi'qate' 



spEO'o 



k'ali.qu'lQ 



ts'oyi'qate 



qEo'm 



diaknya' 



he 



o'uk* 



dje'e'djimit 



t'aqania'e 



ok-s 



•a'k'qka 



read ts'alt 

 g'at 



tledi qate '. 



spEZo'zo. 



k'iik-qu'lQ. 



ts'oyi'qate. 



qEZo'm. 



dakuya'. 



het. 



zo'uk-. 



djie'djimit. 



t'aqamia'e. 



zok-s. 



g-a'k'qka. 



Fifth Report of the Committee, consisting of Sir John Lubbock, 

 Dr. John Evans, Professor W. Boyd Dawkins, Dr. K. Munro, 

 Mr. W. Pengelly, Dr. Henry Hicks, Professor Meldola, Dr. 

 MuiEHEAD, and Mr. James W. Davis, appointed for the pur- 

 pose of ascertaining and recording the localities in the British 

 Islands in tvhich evidences of the existence of Prehistoric 

 Inhabitants of the country are found. (Draiun up by Mr. James- 

 W. Davis.) 



Tour Committee, in presenting their fifth report, have pleasure in draw- 

 ing attention to the list of lake dwellings found in the British Islands 

 compiled by one of their number. 



The Sites of Lahe-Bxuellings or Crannogs hnown up to tliis Date in Great 

 Britairi and Ireland. 



The following alphabetically-arranged lists have been compiled 

 mainly from Munro's ' Lake Dwellings of Europe,' to which work we 

 refer our readers for an epitome of the scientific results obtained from 

 practical investigation, as well as further references to the voluminous 

 literature on the subject. As many of the sites and remains of these 

 ancient habitations have been destroyed in the course of drainage and 

 other agricultural operations, and are now known to have existed merely 

 from tradition or incidental allusions to them in the early annals of the 

 country, we distinguish by an asterisk (*) those that have been carefully 

 observed or more or less practically investigated, and when the recorded' 

 observations are of special archaeological value we give the reference to 

 the original source of their publication. To include more than this, as^. 

 for example, the merest abstract of researches, would so greatly add to 

 the length of this report that its tabular character would be entirely 

 destroyed. 



I. England. 



♦Barton Mere, co. Suffolk. Quart. Journ. Siif. Inst, of Arch, and A'at. Hist., 1869. 

 Cold Ash Common, co. Berks. Wiltshire Arch. Soc, 1869. 

 Crowland (Fen district), co. Lincoln. Fenland Past and Present, by Miller and 



Skertchly. 

 ♦Holderness (four or five localities), Yorkshire. Lake Bivellings of Europe. Proc. 

 York. Geol. and Polytech. Soc, vol. xi. 



189L 



