ANTHROPOLOGY. 697 
a wonderful sculptured stone which had been found the week 
before by some workmen of Mr. Seneca A. Ladd. As Mr. Ladd 
is quite a naturalist, and has already an extensive private collection 
of relics and specimens, he was delighted with the new discovery, ` 
; and exhibited and explained the really remarkable relic with an 
enthusiasm which only the genuine student can feel. 
The stone was found at a depth of about two feet, in the sandy 
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drift at the head of the lake, where the ground apparently had 
not been disturbed for centuries. The location is at the point 
Where Lake Waukewan (“ Measly Pond”) originally emptied into 
ake Winnipiseogee, and was, no doubt, a favorite fishing ground 
for the primitive tribes that formerly inhabited that region. The 
_ Water has been diverted from this channel, and now flows through 
-a chnal furnishing the remarkable water power of forty feet per- 
