. The Antiquarian [serial]. res-ent outline. As the term is a convenient ?Opposite page 114, May Antiquarian. THE ANTIQUARIAN. one and will save future writers confusion tail and one leg. 237 between this and similar structures, it badbest stand. Dr. Wilson had left before the teams be-gan work upon the Effigy. I was calledaway for a day. It was during ray absencethat the plows uncovered two boulder mo-saics, one on each side of the first or eastend cut. Dr. Cresson made drawings ofthem. Prof. Holmes saw them after theteams had torn out all but a portion of a Cressons drawings arein Chicago an


. The Antiquarian [serial]. res-ent outline. As the term is a convenient ?Opposite page 114, May Antiquarian. THE ANTIQUARIAN. one and will save future writers confusion tail and one leg. 237 between this and similar structures, it badbest stand. Dr. Wilson had left before the teams be-gan work upon the Effigy. I was calledaway for a day. It was during ray absencethat the plows uncovered two boulder mo-saics, one on each side of the first or eastend cut. Dr. Cresson made drawings ofthem. Prof. Holmes saw them after theteams had torn out all but a portion of a Cressons drawings arein Chicago and I have no copy here, but Ireproduce one in Figure XXI—a fairly ac-curate copy of his sketches. I saw suchportions as remained— leg, tail and neck—upon my return that evening. The bouldermosaics were very rude, about one hundredfeet long, and were thought by Cresson torepresent panthers. They were some threefeet below the surface. Our first cut, 200 feet long, 60 feet wideand 23 feet deep, east end, cost over $805,. FiR. XXII—Head-dress of Skeleton 248.


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Keywords: ., bookcentury1800, bookdecade1890, booksubj, booksubjectarchaeology