(^2 NEW YORK STATE MUSEUM 



43 Kashong, on Kashong creek, 7 miles south of Geneva, was 

 burned in 1779, but the recent site is hardly well defined. A recent 

 cemetery was opened near the lake in 1889. 



44 Village and burial site on Wilson creek, lot 32. Seneca. 



45 A small cemetery was opened near Melvin hill in 1896. The 

 heads of skeletons were to the west. 



46 There is a scattered site with early relics on the farm of John 

 Laws on the county line north of the Waterloo road. 



47 George S. Conover reported a group of recent sites on Burrell 

 creek, which are here placed under one nrmiber. The creek is very 

 crooked and the lots are not in regular order. 



48 There was an orchard and a small cemetery on lot 36, Seneca, 

 east of the creek on the Rupert farm. Fireplaces have been found. 



49 A mile east of this and south of the creek was a recent village 

 and cemetery on the old Wheadon farm, on lot 12. 



50 A recent cemetery without relics and with longitudinal burial 

 was on the Rippey farm, lot 9, south of the creek. 



51 A trail from the southeast came to the center of the old Brother 

 farm on which there was a village. It followed the highway north- 

 westerly. 



52 Site west of Flint on Flint creek. Stone age material. Reported 

 by H. C. Follett. 



53 Canaenda was removed to lot 32 on Burrell creek where there, 

 was a large cemetery mostly on N. A. Read's farm about 25 rods 

 southwest of the creek. On that farm and east of the creek was one 

 of the principal sites of the town. 



54 On lot 31, west of the creek, was another recent cemetery. 



55 Lodge sites and a cemetery were on the Hazlet farm, lot 37, 

 west of Burrell creek. 



56 Burial mound, recent, at Clifton Springs; explored by J. \\'. 

 Sanborn. 



57 Early village site just south of Clifton Springs, nearly a mile 

 south of the Canandaigua outlet. It occupied a little over 2 acres. 

 Explorations by J. W. Sanborn in 1889 revealed fireplaces very 

 numerous and close together. It seems to have been long inhabited 

 and was of early date. There are fragments of decorated pottery, 

 fine celts and arrowheads. Articles of bone have been found, but 

 none of shell. Reported by Irving W. Coates. 



58 Early village, reported by Mr Coates, is ij/j miles west of the 

 one at Clifton S])rings. The relics are similar to those found in 

 the site above mentioned excepting that no bone articles have been 



