Page:Historic highways of America (Volume 1).djvu/92

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PATHS OF MOUND-BUILDING INDIANS

Ancient work is cut in two by road from Chillicothe to Richmondale, Liberty township, Ross county, Ohio.[1]

The state road passes through the great Graded Way in Pike county, Ohio, one of the most famous works in the United States. It is surely significant that a modern road should pass so near the very track which evidently was a highway in prehistoric times.[2]

Such are the conspicuous examples of ancient works that are now found to be on the alignment of modern routes of travel. In two singularly significant instances—in the Graded Way in Pike county, Ohio, and at Fort Ancient, Warren county, Ohio—there is no doubt that the modern road passes over the very track of the road used by the mound-builders. These two famous works, with the exception of the Serpent Mound probably the most famous in all the Central West, are near no stream of water which is not frozen in the winter and nearly dry in the summer. There can be

  1. Squier and Davis's Ancient Monuments of the Mississippi Valley, plate xx.
  2. Id., plate xxxi., No. 1.