190 



belongs to that class of monuments generally supposed to 

 have been altars, or that called kisvvaens, which are ac- 

 knowledged to have been tombs, it is not for this Committee 

 collectively to express an opinion ; but, from the rudeness of 

 the antiquities discovered within its enclosure, they may 

 venture to refer the date of its erection to the earliest period 

 of society in Ireland ; and as it has been ascertained that 

 interments of different ages have been made within the 

 same tumulus, it may also be inferred, with every appearance 

 of probability, that the urns found within this mound, from the 

 superior degree of art exhibited in their ornaments and forma- 

 tion, should be attributed to a later age than the original 

 tomb. 



The thanks of the Academy were voted to His Excellency 

 the Lord Lieutenant, 



The thanks of the Academy were also voted to Mr. 

 Drummond and to Mr. Larcom. 



DONATIONS. 



Memoires de VAcademie Royale des Sciences Morales et 

 Politiques de VInstitut de France, Tome 1, (2 Serie.) Pre- 

 sented by the Academy. 



Comptes Rendus Hebdomadaires des Stances de l"^ Acade- 

 mic des Sciences ; Par MM. les Secretaires Perpetuels. 

 Premier Seraestre. Nos. 17, 18, for 1838. Presented by the 

 Academy. 



Journal of the Statistical Society of Londo?i, No. 1, 

 May 1838. Presented by the Society. 



Proceedings of the Royal Society, Nos. 31, 32. Pre- 

 sented by the Society. 



Transactions of the Historical and Literary Cominittee of 

 the American Philosophical Society, held at Philadelphia, for 

 promoting Useful Knowledge. Presented by the Society. 



