Grondine reinforced a reason not to share the treasure of the Walam Olum with those unable to grasp the truth. As Le Paige Du Pratz stated, "This is what makes them vividly conscious of the fact that they ought not to waste this treasure, and that the surest means of preserving it unaltered is not to entrust such a precious deposit to people who do not have the prudence necessary to make good use of it, or who in a little while would entirely deform it by additions or by omissions equally unfortunate to the truth."
Contrary to what Bls would have us believe, not all "stick figures" are alike. There is a marked resemblance between Ojibway Chief George Copway's glyphs and the Walam Olum glyphs. This is because the Walam Olum used Ojibway symbols with meaning.
For those who had difficulty locating sources:
1. Man and Impact In the Americas by Grondine is a most valuable source in this study.
2. Picking Berries is used in the Walam Olum in the 19th glyph. According to Napora, glyph 19 is translated as "picking berries".
http://surledosdelatortue.free.fr/24WALAM.htm3. The context of the phrase is set out as described in the Delaware Indian Big House ceremony on page 143. Further supporting the context: Speck clarifies the Delaware phraseology includes the statement "Wampum is our heart" on page 64
4. The Delaware Chief by the English Name of George Copway sets out dozens of other glyhps used in the walam olum in his 1860 book entitled The Traditional History of the Ojibway Indians (Which I stated the walam olum glyphs should be compared with).
http://www.archive.org/details/indianlifeindian00copw5. The Birchbark Scrolls of the Southern Ojibway sets out further symbolism of picking berries on page 103.
http://s243.photobucket.com/albums/ff280/Marburg72/Sacred%20Scrolls%20of%20the%20Southern%20Ojibway/?start=all6. See also Native Heart Berry Basketry of the Ojibway;
http://www.simplybaskets.com/Native_American_Indian_Ojibwa_Strawberry_Heart_Berry_Basket.html7. Historical Context for the time frame of annihilation of the Delaware by George Rogers Clark can be seen in George Rogers Clark's journal. This account verifies the placement of the Delaware in Piqua, Ohio, where the Piqua Ketika Figurines were found. And later in Indiana, Cahokia, Illinois, and Kentucky.
http://books.google.com/books?id=D2gOAAAAIAAJ&printsec=frontcover&dq=george+rogers+clark8. Lakota Winter Counts - The Year the Stars Fell: Lakota Winter Counts at the Smithsonian by Greene is an excellent place to start in the study on these artifacts. Winter counts were also part of this pictographic language of the northern nations, which include countless parallels in symbolism to that of the Walam Olum.
9. Piqua Ohio artifacts from the Smithsonian are shown to be Ketika figurines in "Social Symbolism of Tribal Art" by Carl Schuster. This comprehensive work shows the Ketika Figurines and explains their cultural significance.
http://www.freewebs.com/historyofmonksmound/walamolum.htm