146 NEW YORK STATE MUSEUM 
where the friends of the deceased or any body might see the corpse 
when they pleased. Then over all was built a large shed of bark 
so as to prevent the rain from coming on the vault.”—Sullivan, 
p. 129. Two others were much like this. _ 
13 An early site west of Kendaia on either side of the mouth of 
the ravine with hearths and relics. European relics near. 
14 On lot 93 of the same town in the forks of Rising’s ravine 
a quarter of a mile from Seneca lake was once “a distinct wall with 
holes along the center which passed from one branch of the ravine 
to the other,” inclosing a triangular spot 50 feet above the stream. 
Recent. Also a small site in front of the Willard asylum.—Hims- 
dale. ‘He also reported a small site on lot 94 on a high bluff 
north of the steamboat landing. Sinkers, etc. 
15 Fishing hamlet on lot 1, Ovid, at the mouth of a deep ravine. 
Others occur at similar places as far as Goff’s point. 
16 Swahyawana was a hamlet on E. J. Dean’s farm in the north- 
west corner of Romulus, on the north bank of Sinclair Hollow 
creek. Burned in 1779.—Sullivan, 77. Caches on the farm of 
D. D. Johnson, lot 78, a mile south and three east of Romulus. 
About 20 caches with fireplaces. 
17 An earthwork on lot 29, half a mile from the south line in 
Ovid, on the lake ridge. It was an irregular ellipse with several 
gateways.—Delafeld, p. 389. His plan is given in fig. 56. 
18 A recent cemetery at Goff’s point on the bank of Mill creek, 
lot 26, Lodi. European relics——Delafield, p. 388 
19 Charles S. Hall, of Geneva, N. Y., describes a village site 
on a branch of Kendig creek, lot 36, Fayette. It had pottery. 
20 He also describes a considerable village on the east shore of 
Seneca lake, lot 23, Fayette. Pottery was found. 
21 In the center of lot 33, Fayette, was a fortified town of 
which little is known. It proves to have been circular with an 
area of two acres. Brass kettles and gun barrels have been found 
there. 
‘In his Centennial historical sketch of the town of Fayette, p. 14, just 
published, Diedrich Willers gives a more satisfactory account of the 
work on lot 33, Fayette. A nearly circular bank inclosed several 
acres of elevated land. It was thick and high, with an outside ditch. 
The trees growing within and on the walls were as large as those 
