﻿96 
  [Senate 
  

  

  From 
  Aaron 
  Van 
  Allen, 
  of 
  Stuyvesant, 
  Columbia 
  county. 
  

   Eleven 
  chert 
  arrow 
  heads, 
  found 
  in 
  Stuyvesant. 
  

  

  From 
  Mrs. 
  S. 
  M. 
  Lansing 
  Merchant, 
  of 
  Albany. 
  

   A 
  CANNON 
  BALL, 
  fouud 
  ucar 
  the 
  junction 
  of 
  the 
  Battenkill 
  with 
  

   the 
  Hudson 
  river, 
  on 
  the 
  farm 
  where 
  Burgoyne 
  erected 
  

   a 
  breastwork, 
  &c., 
  during 
  the 
  revolutionary 
  war. 
  

  

  From 
  A. 
  Marks, 
  Esq., 
  of 
  Durham, 
  Greene 
  county. 
  

  

  Several 
  chert 
  arrow 
  heads 
  ; 
  also 
  fragments 
  of 
  human 
  bones 
  and 
  

   INDIAN 
  POTTERY, 
  obtained 
  by 
  Mr. 
  Marks 
  from 
  an 
  ancient 
  

   Indian 
  burying 
  ground 
  on 
  the 
  banks 
  of 
  Connecticut 
  

   river. 
  

  

  From 
  Chester 
  C. 
  Moore, 
  of 
  Albany. 
  

  

  1 
  . 
  A 
  MEDICINE 
  POUCH, 
  manufactured 
  of 
  Deer 
  skin 
  and 
  beautifully 
  

  

  ornamented 
  with 
  Porcupine 
  quills, 
  made 
  by 
  the 
  Black- 
  

   feet 
  Indians 
  of 
  Oregon. 
  

  

  2. 
  A 
  string 
  of 
  stone 
  beads, 
  obtained 
  from 
  the 
  Black 
  -feet 
  Indians 
  

  

  of 
  Oregon, 
  and 
  supposed 
  to 
  have 
  been 
  obtained 
  by 
  them 
  

   from 
  the 
  Russian 
  traders. 
  

  

  3. 
  A 
  flint 
  ARROW 
  HEAD, 
  found 
  in 
  the 
  Black-feet 
  country, 
  near 
  the 
  

  

  Rocky 
  Mountains, 
  where 
  a 
  battle 
  had 
  been 
  fought 
  be- 
  

   tween 
  the 
  Black-feet 
  and 
  Crow 
  tribes 
  of 
  Indians. 
  

  

  From 
  Doct. 
  Chas. 
  Martin, 
  of 
  the 
  United 
  States' 
  Navy. 
  

  

  1. 
  A 
  MACE 
  or 
  WAND, 
  made 
  from 
  the 
  feathers 
  of 
  the 
  Macaw 
  or 
  

  

  Toucan, 
  carried 
  in 
  the 
  hand 
  by 
  the 
  chiefs 
  of 
  the 
  Canni- 
  

   bal 
  Indians 
  of 
  the 
  Amazon 
  river, 
  80 
  or 
  90 
  miles 
  above 
  

   Para, 
  a 
  city 
  of 
  Brazil. 
  

  

  2. 
  A 
  tube 
  or 
  sheath 
  made 
  of 
  woven 
  strips 
  of 
  bark 
  or 
  reed, 
  capa- 
  

  

  ble 
  of 
  enlargement 
  and 
  contraction. 
  Used 
  for 
  the 
  pur- 
  

   pose 
  of 
  expressing 
  the 
  liquid 
  from 
  the 
  arrow 
  root 
  in 
  its 
  

   preparation 
  for 
  use. 
  From 
  the 
  Amazon 
  river, 
  80 
  or 
  90 
  

   miles 
  above 
  Para, 
  a 
  city 
  of 
  Brazil. 
  

  

  3. 
  Two 
  earthern 
  pipes, 
  of 
  different 
  style, 
  with 
  a 
  wooden 
  orna- 
  

  

  mental 
  stem. 
  From 
  the 
  Amazon 
  river, 
  80 
  or 
  90 
  miles 
  

   above 
  Para, 
  a 
  city 
  of 
  Brazil. 
  

  

  4. 
  Gourd. 
  From 
  the 
  city 
  of 
  Isabel, 
  Guatemala, 
  painted 
  in 
  imita- 
  

  

  tion 
  of 
  the 
  ruins 
  in 
  that 
  country. 
  

  

  