AS NEW YORK STATE MUSEUM 
dant. This was occupied in 1677. Fig. 103 is a long and perfoa 
rated triangular arrowhead, also from Pompey. Fig. 111 is ofa 
different character, being of yellow sheet brass, stemmed and 
barbed and with notches in the edges. This is from the fort 
south of Pompey Center, occupied about 1640. 
Te ee ee 
Fig. 117 is from Cayuga county and was found in 1888. It has 
no perforation but part of the shaft remains attached, being - 
bound below the metal. Mr W. W. Heda the finder, called it a | 
brass arrowhead. 
Fig. 113 is of copper and from the Sheldon fort, lot 69, Pom- — 
pey, probably occupied about 1630. It differs from most in hav- | 
ing the two long edges slightly convex. Fig. 129 is one of three 
triangular arrowheads found by the writer at Indian hill, Pom- 
pey, in 1886. This is perforated but the others are not. Fig. 
133 is of rarer material, being of thin iron. It is triangular, 
with indented base, and having one of the long edges irregular. 
This came from Indian Castle, Pompey. Fig. 134 is from the 
same place and is of copper. The perforation is central and 
long, and the ends of the base have a slight upward curve. Fig. 
140 is a long triangular brass arrowhead from the fort south 
of Pompey Center, having convex edges. Most of the articles _ 
from this site are in the Vail collection. 
Fig. 141 is a brass arrowhead from an Oneida village site near | 
Munnsville, Madison co. It has a sharp angular indentation in 
the base and another in one lateral edge. Fig. 142 is another 
of sheet brass, found in 1879 east of the Oswego river at 
Phoenix. It is barbed and stemmed. 
Fig. 145 was drawn from one taken from a grave near Amster- 
dam N.;Y. and in the possession of Mr Le Grand S. Strong. It 
has an indented base and a square perforation. This is unusual 
though not unique. Mr Grider gave the same feature to two 
others. Fig. 144 is one of these, from the same place, and differs — 
from the last in its pentagonal form. Fig. 159 is the third of 
these, and is much larger than the others. 
Fig. 157 is a large and fine brass arrowhead, stemmed and 
barbed. It is from Stone Arabia and is in the Richmond collee- 
. 
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