[84]. Colden, History of the Five Nations, reprint, p. 58, New York, 1866.
[85]. Lahontan, Voyages, Vol I, p 42. London, 1735.
[86]. Connelly, W. E., Wyandot Folk Lore, Topeka, 1899.
[87]. Archaeological Report of Ontario, 1905. Boyle, David; The Iroquois, p. 147.
[88]. Journal of a Voyage to New York in 1679–80, by Jasper Dankers and Peter Slyter. Translated in Vol I, Trans. L. I. Hist. Soc. 1867.
[89]. With the New England Indians the idea was held that men were found by Glooskape in a hole made by an arrow which he had shot into an ash tree.
[90]. Brinton: Lenape and their Legends, p. 170. Phila., 1885.
[91]. Lafitau, Moeurs des Savvages Ameriquains, Tome II, plate 3, page 43, Paris, 1724.
[92]. See Speck, F.G., Huron Moose Hair Embroidery, Amer. Anthropologist, N.S., Vol. 13, no. 1, p 1.
[93]. Hewitt, Iroquois Cosmology, Part I, p. 151; 21 An. Rept. Bur. Am. Eth., Washington, 1903.