1871.] Proceedings of the Asiatic Society. 239 
removed, until about 15 inches from the surface broken red pottery 
began to show on the south side. At last some stiff leaden colour- 
ed clay was found, fast binding pieces of pottery, and on close ex- 
amination large quantities of teeth were found, which evidently 
had been put into a gurrah and imbedded in this clay. These 
bones are, I believe, the back teeth of horses, in very good pre- 
servation. This clay then began to be found in patches, in which, 
as a rule, you always find pottery and other implements, and ap- 
peared in no other place than on the south side. 
‘I was standing one evening looking on, when all of a sudden I 
saw a ‘‘find,” and immediately jumped down into the hole, and 
with the greatest care dug out of the clay, well cemented together, 
two copper bells, two round copper (in my opinion) ear-rings, and 
an iron axe; these I handled with the utmost care, vainly hoping 
that the whole would remain in this solid state; but after a few 
days, the heat of June soon dried up the clay, and the whole be- 
came detached. ‘This and a few iron implements and a gold ring 
were the only things found. This excavation was carried down 
about 2°6 feet. 
‘In the other we went down over three feet from the surface, and 
nothing but iron was found, very rust eaten. The only implement 
in good preservation was a kind of saucer for holding oil, which 
had a handle with a hook to hang by, and a spiral spring, which 
must I think have been wound round a stick.’ 
The following papers were read— 
I.— On a new Photo-callographic Printing Process.—By Capra 
J. WarErnovsE, Assistant Surveyor General. 
Ihave the pleasure to bring to your notice this evening a new 
process of photographic printing, I have lately worked out, which, 
though it can scarcely be called original, is in some respects new 
and, as I believe it has never before been worked in India, a de- 
scription of it may not prove uninteresting to many of the members 
of this Society, more especially as the new process will be used for 
the reproduction of photographs and drawings of all kinds for the 
illustration of our Journal. 
The few specimens I have with me, though very imperfect, are 
sufficient to shew the capabilities of the process. I have hitherto 
