MAN AND THE GLACIAL PERIOD. 



6 9 



A little above Hoxne, on the left side of the stream called the 

 Gold Brook, is the Hoxne clay-pit. The clay is excavated along the 

 slope of the shallow valley through which the brook runs. The road 

 to Eye skirts the hill-side, having to the west the park of Sir Edward 

 Kerrison ; and to the east, between it and the stream, a narrow strip 



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of land from which the clay has been dug. The old workers had 

 commenced near the village of Hoxne, and as they gradually exhaust- 

 ed the clay up to the road they moved farther southward, and the 

 point at which it is now excavated is probably at least a quarter of a 



