Get your research done first and your facts need to be corrected.
"In Zeisberger’s Delaware dictionary, however, we find waloh or walok, signifying a cave or hole, while in the “Walam Olum” we have oligonunk rendered “at the place of caves, the region being further described as a buffalo land on a pleasant plain, where the Lenape advancing seaward from a less abundant northern region, at last found food (Walam Olum pp 194-195)
Olum was the name of the scores, marks, or figures in use on the tally-sticks or record-boards. The native Delaware missionary, Mr. Albert Anthony, says that the knowledge of these ancient signs has been lost, but that the word olum is still preserved by the Delaware boys in their games when they keep the score by notches on a stick. These notches— not the sticks—are called to this day olum—an interesting example of the preservation of an archaic form in the language of children.
The name Walam Olum is therefore a highly appropriate one for the record, and may be translated "RED SCORE."
The Lenâpé and their legends: with the complete text and symbols of the Walam olum, a new translation, and an inquiry into its authenticity.
By Daniel Garrison Brinton, Constantine Samuel Rafinesque, His
Published by D.G. Brinton, 1885
Original from the New York Public Library
Walam Olum Means “painted record”
American Indian Literature: An Anthology
By Alan R. Velie
Edition: 2, revised, illustrated
Published by University of Oklahoma Press, 1991
Walum Olum means "painted records," with Walum more specifically meaning "
painted red" and Olum implying a record painted or engraved on white bark
New Jersey, America's main road
By John T. Cunningham
Edition: illustrated, revised
Published by Doubleday, 1976
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And if you are interested in birchbark scrolls: An exhibition was scheduled at the Montana Museum of Art and Culture.
Spirit Trails and Sky Beings
January 13 - March 8, 2009
Paxson Gallery
This exhibition features Ojibway stories scribed on birch scrolls as told and made by Ojibway traditionalist and UM graduate Richard LaFromboise (Miskomin). Birch bark scrolls, or pictographic scrolls, serve as memory aids to correctly and completely tell the tribe’s traditional stories through an elaborate series of symbols called pictographs. The stories are expressions of Ojibway culture that teach lessons, morals, and values to children as well as adults. Pictographic scrolls are a very rare art form and are preserved today in the hands of a few individuals known as “Keepers of the Scrolls.”http://www.umt.edu/montanamuseum/exhibitionschedule.htmThe following page prooves that these documents were also used on maps - to document migrations, just as used in the Walam Olum.
http://www.kunstpedia.com/articles/452/2/The-Indigenous-Maps-and-Mapping-of-North-American-Indians/Page2.html------------
And we have not said anything of the "character" of Oestreicher. This debunker has a long history of skepticism and rash judgement. His take on the Grave Creek Stone recently added to his list of hoax claims. However, Oest ignored P.P. Cherry's detailed proof and history of the excavation just as he ignored the fact that birchbark scrolls exist.