364 NEW YORK STATE MUSEUM 
ornamented with dots and lines. Fig. 95 is remarkable for its 
material, being of oyster shell. The eyeballs are strongly marked, 
and it has been broken off at the hinder limbs. This is in the 
Dann collection. Fig. 96 is another good example of the turtle 
ornamented with half circles and dots. It is from Pompey, and 
was in the collection of the late L. W. Ledyard of Cazenovia. Fig. 
74 is another rude example from Pompey, possibly early. Fig. 
102 is an animal form from a Cayuga grave, and may have lost its 
head, necessitating a new perforation. It is ornamented with dots 
in rows. Fig. 100 is a beaver with its scaly tail, and is from the 
Ganagarae site, lot 13, East Bloomfield. It is made of a very 
durable shell, and is 1.75 of an inch long. The neck is perforated 
as usual. 
Fishes have no significance as clan totems, but good examples 
occur in shell and stone. Fig. ror is one from Gayuga. They all 
have two vertical perforations, one on either side of the dorsal fin. 
Fig. 104 is of one broken at the forward hole. Fig. 212 is from a 
reduced photograph of the same. It was found at Indian Castle, | 
Pompey, and was therefore made in the last half of the 17th cen- 
tury. With the following two it is now in the Bigelow collection. 
All three are from Pompey. Fig. 59 lacks the dorsal fin, and the 
holes are on either side of the ventral fins. It is quite suggestive 
of the sturgeon, but lacks some features. Fig. 105 is much the 
finest of these, possibly intended for a black bass in spirited action. 
It is of a hard and highly polished shell, and is ornamented with 
diagonal lines inclosing dots. 
Cylindric pendants are not common or large, as few shells would 
afford material for these. Fig. 67 and 71 are of two in the Hild- 
burgh collection and are 1 inch long. Both are from the McClure 
farm, Hopewell. Fig. 31 is of ariother, quite large and thick, which 
came from the Van Arsdale farm, Fleming (N. Y.) Those which 
are thin and flat are much more common. Fig. 32 is large, angular 
and flat, with one perforation in which is a copper ring, and comes 
from Indian hill, Pompey. Fig. 78 is of nearly the same form, 
but is thin and has a small perforation at each end. It is in the 
Dann collection. Fig. 88 is from Hopewell, is quite flat, and has 
