114 NEW YORK STATE MUSEUM 



north of the Seneca river. All the usual relics and abundant pot- 

 tery but no drills or scrapers, which are absent from all Iroquois 

 forts. A fine spring on the terrace below. Shells of Unio com- 

 planahis abound. A bone fishhook was found. 



9 Two hamlets and a cemetery on G. A. Bigelow's land on the 

 hill in the north part of Baldwinsville. In the hamlets were pipes, 

 arrowheads and celts. There were no reHcs with the skeletons 

 which lay horizontally, with the knees drawn up. There were 

 camps all through the present village. 



10 Extensive hamlet on the south side of Float bridge, lot 86 

 on the east bank of the river. A great deal of pottery with other 

 relics but no scrapers or drills. 



11 A camp south of the railroad bridge and east of the river 

 on lot 87 with early relics and pottery. On the opposite bank were 

 fireplaces with pottery. There was another small hamlet at the 

 Red rock rift, lot 93 half a mile below. . 



12 A circular earthwork on lot 89 of about three acres is now 

 obliterated. It was about 360 feet in diameter and the road passes 

 through the center. Pottery is abundant with the usual Iroquoian 

 articles. It is about three miles from Baldwinsville and one and 

 one half miles from the river on either side, but flat sinkers are 

 found, suggesting a question of use. Clark reported a ditch around 

 it four feet deep with a bank on each side of this, and a gateway. 

 A man who cleared the land told the writer that there were merely 

 two broad depressions. It is on level land and there is a small 

 site half a mile away. 



13 Two or three hamlets near th^ north end of Cold Spring 

 bridge, lot 100 on both sides of the road with abundant relics and 

 with pottery on the east side. 



14 Three hamlets on the south shore of Cross lake, on lots 31, 

 32 and 33 Elbridge. Stone relics but no pottery. 



15 Three hamlets and scattered lodges on lot 34 mostly on the 

 Elliott farm. The central one was long occupied and yielded many 

 fine relics but scarcely any pottery. 



16 There was a camp on the river just west of Carpenter^s brook 

 and several east on lot 35. One hamlet was at the mouth of the 



