known as Ambresbury Banks, tlpinni) Forest. 61 



another with one bulb and one facet. Found in the silting of 

 the interior slope. 



No. 3. One flint chip and piece of pottery, too much worn 

 for identification. From the body of the rampart. 



No. 5a. Piece of the rim of a pot, red on the outside and 

 grey in the interior, Avithout any grains of quartz or sand in 

 its composition ; the sides of the pot 0-40 inch thick, the rim 

 projecting about 0-24 inch, and 0-34 inch deep. This might 

 be Romano-British. Found in the silting of the interior 

 slope at a spot where marks of burnt earth and charcoal 

 indicated that a fire had been hghted at the foot of the 

 interior slope when the rampart was intact. A representation 

 of this fragment is shown in the chromo -lithograph, Fig. 1, 



PL V.-^ 



No. 6. Piece, apparently, of pottery, resembling No. 3 in 

 texture, but too much worn for identification; it had no 

 grains of quartz in its composition. Found in the body of 

 the rampart on the old surface line. 



No. 7. Fragment of pottery about 1-25 inch square and 

 0-36 inch thick, brick-red on one side, which is the outside, 

 and dark brown in the interior of the substance and in the 

 inside of the pot; it has no grains of quartz in its com- 

 position. On the inside are striations, which might perhaps 

 be the marks of the lathe turning on a potter's wheel, but 

 the outside is uneven and shows no such marks. Found in 

 the body of the rampart on the old surface line.^ This frag- 

 ment resembles fragments found at Cissbury Camp, near 

 Worthing, and beheved to be British or Eomano-British, the 

 red-brick colour distinguishing it from No. 5. 



2 [The Society is indebted to the author for this costly plate. General 

 Pitt-Eivers, being of opinion that the objects found were typical of the 

 kind of relics likely to be exhumed from similar earthworks, very 

 generously added the cln^omo-hthograph to the Eeport for the information 

 of future camp-explorers. The fragments themselves, with the other 

 specimens described in the paper, wih be deposited in the Museum of the 

 Corporation of London, at the Guildhall.— Ed.] 



- On further examination I am inclined to doubt whether these 

 striations imply lathe turning, as the scratches are not perfectly parallel 

 to one another. 



