44 SMITHSONIAN MISCELLANEOUS COLLECTIONS VOL. IIO 



144. Shapovalovka. — Bones of mammoth and some small flint 

 laminae were found in the basin of the Seim River by N. D. Zubok- 

 Mokievskii during 1879 on the shore of the lake in a steep escarpment, 

 at the depth of 2.0 m. 



145. Dovginichi. — In 1929 I. F. Levitskii found traces of this 

 Upper Paleolithic station on the left bank of the Uzh River, a right 

 tributary of the Pripet, near Ovruch. 



146. Iskorost. — This Upper Paleolithic station stands near the 

 rocky bank of the Uzh River at a depth of 0.5-9.8 m. During the 

 excavations by V. V. Khvoiko in 191 1, there were discovered beneath 

 the burial mounds a series of campfires, many worked flints, and a 

 few bones. Khvoiko accumulated here a large number of nuclei and 

 their flakes. This material has not been published. 



147. Kolodesnoe. — During 1924 I. F. Levitskii reported the acci- 

 dental finding of bones of horse, mammoth, and other forms in a 

 quarry along the Slucha River at the mouth of its tributary, the 

 Tiukhterevka. The confirmatory excavations by S. Gamchenko in 

 1926 produced no positive results. The engraved bones published 

 by Levitskii remain of doubtful character. 



148. Nerubaiskoe. — Quaternary bones, including mammoth, rhi- 

 noceros, cave bear, deer, Bos, antelope, camel, and horse, were found 

 near Odessa. N. L Krishtafovich states that during his visit in 1904 

 he did not discover any worked flints. 



149. Semenki. — This Upper Paleolithic site stands on the right 

 bank of the southern Bug River near this village in Bratslav district. 

 During 1931 K. M. Polikarpovich found flint implements and animal 

 bones, among them the northern deer and the horse. The fauna has 

 not yet been completely determined. 



150. Bagovitsy. — An Upper Paleolithic site was located near 

 Kamenets-Podolsk on the bank of the Dniester. The surface finds 

 have not yet been described. 



151. Vruhlevtsy. — This station, situated not far from the Dniester 

 along the Ternovaia River near Kamenets-Podolsk, was first identified 

 in 1881 by V. B. Antonovich. Typologically Lower Magdalenian 

 flints were excavated from the diluvial clay during 1927. 



152. Kalhis.—Dnr'mg 1927 typologically Magdalenian flints were 

 found near this village on the left bank of the Dniester on the plateau 

 near the Kalius River. 



153. 154. Kitai-Gorod I and II. — Traces of the Upper Paleolithic 

 sites were found on the right bank of the Ternovaia River, a left 

 tributary of the Dniester, near Kamenets-Podolsk. The material has 

 not been fully described. 



