612 AMERICAN ANTHROPOLOGIST In. s., 29, 1927 and from there eastward to the place where the railway makes a cut through the point of rock on which the pictograph is situated. At this place the telegraph wires cross the track. The pictograph is about 50 feet from the track and approximately level with it on a nearly vertical face of a granitic cliff. The rock slopes back about six inches in six feet and the pictograph is consequently exposed to the weather. (The bottom of the largest “copper,” one of the figures in the pictograph, is 6 feet 10 inches above the horizontal rock at the base of the cliff.) The pictograph faces westward or nearly parallel with the railroad. Consequently it can be seen from the west, that is, by looking ahead on the left when traveling east or by looking back on the right when going west. On June 5, 1925, I discovered this pictograph from a passing train and three months later cut the small alder and spruce trees in front of it to allow of photographing all of it and to make it entirely visible from passing trains. Photographs and motion pictures were then taken and are now available in the photo- graphic division of the Department of Mines, Ottawa, Canada. The pictograph, which is illustrated in Fig. 1, is approximately twenty feet long and comprises eight figures. (To be exact it is 9 feet 3 inches from the lower left corner of the largest “‘copper”’ or second figure from the left to the lower right corner of the one at the right.) It represents six complete “coppers,” the upper part of a seventh “copper,” and a face resembling a human being’s although it may possibly be that of a mythical character. The “coppers” are drawn in red, apparently the same shade as most other pictographs in British Columbia while the face is in brown or purplish brown, the only pictograph I recall of this color. The six “coppers” are in a row, the incomplete one being below the second of these from the left. The face is above and to the right of the ‘‘coppers.” In the case of each of the six ‘‘coppers” there is the usual hori- zontal line between the upper and lower part and the vertical line from this to the base, the latter line dividing the lower part of the “copper.” In the upper part of the “copper” at the left no ‘marks were noticed, but in the second there is a ring-like figure