AND THEIR REMAINS. PIERS. 123 



1888. Creed (Georgs). — Pictographs at Fairy Lake, Queens Co., N. S. 

 Read before Nova Scotia Historical Society, 13th November, 

 1888, but not published entire. A very full summary 

 of it appears in the Morning Chronicle (newspaper), Hali- 

 fax, of 14th November, 1888. — 331 sheets of the copies of 

 the petroglyphs made by Creed in 1887 and 1888 to illustrate 

 this paper, are now preserved in the Provincial Museum 

 at Halifax. 



1888. Brown (George Stayley).— Yarmouth, N. S. Boston, 1888.— 



Chapter 7 (pp. 86-lOlj treats of the Micmacs. 



1889. Patterson (Rev. George, D. D.). — The Stone Age in Nova Scotia, 



as illustrated by a collection of relics- presented to Dal- 

 housie College. Trans. N. S. Inst. Nat. Sc, vii, pp. 231- 

 252. Eead 11 Feb., 1889. 



1889. Piers (Harry). — ^Aboriginal Remains of Nova Scotia, illustrated 



by the Pi'ovincial Museum Collections. Trans. N. S. Inst. 

 Nat. Sc, vii, pp. 276-290, with 1 plate illustrating 6 

 specimens. Read 13 May, 1889. 



1890. Rand (Rev. Silas Tertius). — Legends of the Micmac Indians. 



American Antiquarian, vol. xii, p. 3; Chicago, 1890. 



1891. Pilling (James Constantine). — Bibliography of the Algonquian 



Languages. Washington, Bureau of Ethnology, 1891. 614 

 pp. — An exhaustive work on the subject, giving full titles 

 and biographical sketches of authors of xvorks dealing with 

 the language of the Micmacs, etc. 



1883. Mallary (Col. Garrick). — Picture-writing of the American 

 Indians. In 10th Annual Report of Bureau of Ethnology, 

 1888-9; Washington, 1893 — Describes petroglyphs on Fairy 

 rocks. Queens Co., N. S., on pp. 37-42, and figures Nos. 1, 

 2, 549, 550, 654 to 658, 717, 718, 739 to 741, 1254, 1255, and 

 1262, illustrate Nova Scotian examples. 



1894. Rand (Rev. Silas Tertius, D. D., D.C.L., LL. D.).— Legends of 



the Micmacs. New York & Lond., 1894. xlvi, 452 pp. — 

 Pp. xvii-xxix give bibliography of Rand's works and 

 biblical translations in Micmac; and on pp. xxx-xlvi is 

 an account of the manners, customs, language, and litera- 

 ture of the Micmacs from Rand's pamphlet, '"'A Short 

 Statement o! Facts" (1850). 



