Otoauguna Bifurcate. Fig. 4, Plate I. Length eight-tenths inch. Perforated. Red pipe stone. Onondaga county.
Otoauguna Quadralateral. Fig. 5, Plate 2. Material, red pipe stone. Onondaga county.
Class Ninth.—ÆS.[76]
[76] Æs, a generic name for a shell—Algonquin.
The number and variety of sea and sometimes fresh water shells worn by the ancient aborigines, has not been ascertained, but is large. They are uniformly found to be univalves.
Æs Marginella. Fig. 10, Plate I. This species was first detected in the Grave Creek mound. It is a marginella. The figure is, incidentally, inexact. Onondaga.
Class Tenth.—OCHALIS.[77]
[77] From the Shawanoe word Ochali, a nose.