By William Long, Esq. 208 



scattered fragments of burnt bones, a few small amber rings, beads 

 of the same, and of jet, with the point of a bronze dart. In the 

 large barrow. No. 57, he found, in a cist, at the depth of 12 feet 

 from the surface, the remainder, as he thought of the brass dart, 

 and with it a curious whetstone, some ivory tweezers, and some de- 

 cayed articles of bone. No. 66 is a low barrow, in which were 

 fragments of a human skull, of a large sepulchral urn, and a drinking 

 cup. No. 67 appeared to have been previously opened. No. 68 is 

 what Sir E,. Hoare calls a "pond barrow.^' No. 69 had been previously 

 opened by Mr. Cunnington. No. 70 had an interment of burnt 

 bones, deposited in an irregular cist. No. 71 produced the skeleton 

 of a child, near the surface, and lower down, two rude sepulchral 

 urns, the one above the other, each containing burnt bones. No. 

 72 had been opened by Mr. Cunnington, and produced a sepulchral 

 urn. No. 73 had, near the surface, a skeleton, with four wooden 

 beads near its neck ; and it appeared tbat another interment of burnt 

 bones had been taken out. No. 74 produced a cinerarium, and ashes 

 in a cist. Nos. 75, 76, 77, 78, and 79 had been opened before, and 

 appear to have been robbed of their contents. No. 80 is not sepul- 

 chral. In No. 81 was a large rude urn, containing an interment of 

 burnt bones. No 82 had a cinerarium, and two simple interments 

 of burnt bones, just under the surface. No. 83 contained a sepulchral 

 urn, with a small bronze pin. To the south of No. 80, on the 

 opposite hill, is a disc-barrow, not inserted in the plan, which 

 produced a rude urn without an interment. No. 84, the largest 

 barrow in this group, had been ploughed over. In making our 

 section, we found pieces of stags^ horns, pottery, and the remains of 

 a skeleton and drinking cup and two knives ; but the primary in- 

 terment was a skeleton, with its legs gathered up, and hands placed 

 under its head. No. 85 contained originally an interment of burnt 

 bones, within a cist, but had been opened. No. 86 had also been 

 opened ; it had a circular cist and a cinerarium. No. 87 contained 

 fragments of an urn and burnt bones, in a shallow circular cist. No. 

 88 produced, just under the turf, fragments of a rude urn and burnt 

 bones, and lower down, a sepulchral urn reversed over a deposit of 

 burnt bones. No. 89 had been in tillage; it contained a skeleton 



