54 NEW YORK STATE MUSEUM 
have been plowed up.” This was on the farm of Mr Scribner.— 
Child. Directory, 1869-70 . 
12 Conihunto was four miles below Unadilla on the west side of 
the Susquehanna, and was also called Gunnygunter. It was de- 
stroyed in 1778.—Sullivan, p. 23. But for the situation this might 
be supposed a corruption of Oneonta. There was also a Mohawk 
village farther down but north of Oquaga, called Wauteghe and sug- 
gesting the later Otego. 
13 A few hut rings one and one half miles north of Greene were 
on the river bank. Relics all the way to Greene. 
14 Mr Hildburgh reports a camp site about three quarters of a 
mile north of Greene and on a hill near the east side of the river. 
15 Fishing camps along the river between Greene and Chenango 
Forks. 
16 F. H. Williams, of Greene, writes, ‘‘ There were many camp 
sites here, about 20 within five miles of Greene. In fact at any place 
along the Chenango river where a spring is or was found, you can 
be fairly sure of a camp site.” He describes a very large one on 
Indian brook, two and a half miles south of Greene on the 
west side of the river. The site is a mile from the Chenango, and 
there are about 70 hut rings arranged in three groups. Those 
farthest down the brook are in two lines, eight to 10 feet apart in 
the rows. The next group is similar and about 30 rods away. 
These might be long houses quite as well. The third is in the form 
of a crescent, and there are also a few scattered fire places. The 
relics are early. ; 
17 There is a large camp at Stillwater flats, about five miles south 
of Greene on the east bank of the river. 
Clinton county. Though the place where the French and Iro- 
quois first met in battle, little was known of the aboriginal occupa- 
tion of the west side of Lake Champlain until 1878. Dr D. S. Kel- 
logg of Plattsburg then commenced investigations, and within four 
or five years located “ 21 other dwelling sites in the Champlain valley 
from Ile Aux Noix in the River Richelieu, to Ticonderoga on Lake 
Champlain.” He had just described a Plattsburg site, and the quo- 
a a ee 
