58 SMITHSONIAN MISCELLANEOUS COLLECTIONS VOL. IIO 



slope of the 40- to 50-meter terrace. The PaleoHthic remains formed 

 small, separate accumulations around the hearth. Among the finds 

 were quartzite tools ; crushed bones of northern deer, horse, hare, 

 and wolf ; and small pieces of charcoal from larch and fir. 



244. Kokorevo IV. — This site, situated 2 kilometers farther down- 

 stream than Kokorevo in the Kipirnyi Log, was investigated by 

 G. P. Sosnovskii in 1925 and 1928. The Paleolithic remains were 

 in the loesslike sandy loam of the lowest terrace above flood level at 

 a depth of 1.5-2. i m. In addition to tools there were excavated the 

 bones of animals, including the northern deer, noble deer, bison, and 

 Equus hemionus. 



245. Korkino. — A stone tool and a bone awl were found at the 

 bottom of the ravine, the last one at Korkino on the left bank of the 

 Yenisei River. 



246. Krasnoi-arsk. — During the construction of a brewery, bones 

 of fossil animals with traces of human workmanship and typologically 

 Paleolithic stone tools came to light. Similar discoveries were also 

 made in another part of the city. 



247. Kubekovo. — Quaternary animals bones, Paleolithic stone tools, 

 and a deer antler with traces of human workmanship were found by 

 N. K. Auerbakh and V. I. Gromov in Lankov Log and in the other 

 ravines near Kubekovo on the left bank of the Yenisei, 23 kilometers 

 upstream from Krasnoiarsk. 



248. Ladeiki. — Traces of this Upper Paleolithic site were found 

 near this village on the right bank of the Yenisei, 8 kilometers farther 

 downstream from Krasnoiarsk, under the dunes and the pockets of 

 loess among the pebbles. L T. Savenkov found here in 1883 bones of 

 a large Bos and tools of Paleolithic type at the edge of the lowest 

 terrace. The excavations were continued by Baron Joseph de Baye 

 in 1896, by G. Merhart in 1920, and by G. P. Sosnovskii in 1923. 



249. Lepeshkina (Irdzha). — A group of Upper Paleolithic sites 

 were located on the right bank of the Yenisei near this village, oppo- 

 site Bateni pier. The first site, which was discovered by G. Merhart 

 in 1920, comprised the material on the slope of Irdzha Mountain, the 

 elevation surrounding the river valley. In 1923 G. P. Sosnovskii dis- 

 covered in the deposits of eolian sands three hearths surrounded by 

 bones of animals, including bison, stone tools and flakes. The second 

 surface site, yielding stone tools, was found by Sosnovskii in 1923 

 on the bank of the Yenisei Canal upstream from the village. V. I. 

 Gromov and G. F. Mirchink discovered a thick cultural stratum in 

 1927 near Lepeshkina. 



250. Pereselencheskii Punkt. — This Paleolithic site stands on the 



