[67.] Tour to the Lakes, 1827, p. 305.
[68.] Long’s Exped. to the St. Peter’s River, 1824, p. 332.
[69.] L’incertitude des signes de la Mort, 1742, tome i, p. 475, et seq.
[70.] The writer is informed by Mr. John Henry Boner that the custom still prevails not only in Pennsylvania, but at the Moravian settlement of Salem, N.C.
[71.] Rep. Smithsonian Inst., 1866, p. 319.
[72.] Uncivilized Races of the World, 1874, v. ii, p. 774, et seq.
[73.] Hist. of Florida, 1775, p. 88.
[74.] Antiquities of the Southern Indians, 1873, p. 105.
[75.] Bartram’s Travels, 1791, p. 516.
[76.] “Some ingenious men whom I have conversed with have given it as their opinion that all those pyramidal artificial hills, usually called Indian mounds, were raised on this occasion, and are generally sepulchers. However, I am of different opinion.”