By the Rev. W. C. Lukis. ° 103 

Section of Barrow near Windmill Hill, Collingbourne Ducis. 
Showing Cist and position of Urns. 
a a Ground level. 
On the slope of the hill, on the left of the road leading from 
Everley to Ludgershall, soon after you have crossed the Colling- 
bourne and Tidworth road, you may perceive three small low bar- 
rows near to each other, and ina line running nearly east and west. 
They have been greatly reduced in elevation by the plough, and 
were examined by me in December, 1857. In the westernmost 
one, at a depth of one foot from the apex, I found a thick layer of 
wood ashes and charcoal, in which were a few burnt human bones, 
covering a space of about four feet in diameter. Under this layer 
was a circular hole dug in the chalk, fourteen inches in diameter 
-and one foot deep, containing burnt human bones and charcoal. 
In the middle barrow was a similar layer of charcoal, covering 
a hole two feet in diameter and two feet deep, filled with burnt 
human bones and charcoal. 
In the third barrow there was no cist or hole, but at a depth of 
six inches from the apex was a heap of burnt human bones and 
charcoal, and among a: a perfect bone pin, pierced at the larger 
end. There was no trace of pottery in these barrows, but there 
were a few animal bones reduced to small fragments, and in the 
last, portions of the skull and the curved bony cores of the horns 
of what was probably a small Bos dongifrons. 
