48 
The relics found at Tyning, therefore, meagre as they are, may 
have been contemporary with these ancient remains as well as 
with the Glastonbury lake village, and they may form a link in 
the early history of this part of Somersetshire. 

SUPPLEMENTARY NOTES ON FURTHER DISCOVERIES 
MADE IN JANUARY AND FEBRUARY, 1898. 
Soon after the foregoing Paper was read, the writer was mucl: 
gratified by the discovery of two other refuse pits of a similar 
description in the same quarry. 
One of these (called No. 2) was met with about 20 feet to: 
the North of the one referred to in the Paper, and was in the 
form of an elbow, the total length excavated being 12 feet, by 
4 feet in width and 4 feet in depth. The other, which occurred 
about 13 feet to the North East of the No. 2 pit, was more like 
the one first discovered, being rudely circular in form, and its 
dimensions being 4 feet in diameter by 3 feet 6 inches in depth. 
The infilling of both consisted of much the same material as 
has been described in the Paper, being surface mould mixed with 
fragments of charcoal and burnt earth and stones, together with 
various articles of ancient British age. 
These additional finds included, amongst other things, three 
jaws of animals with the teeth attached, five loose teeth, one 
boar’s incisor, and a large number of bones more or less 
fragmentary, some of them being of larger size than those first 
met with, and many of them having been rudely split 
longitudinally probably to obtain the marrow, but they have 
not been examined by an expert and it cannot yet be stated to. 
what animals they belonged. 
The following specimens were of such special interest as to 
call for individual notice. 
Pottery.—About forty additional fragments of Pottery were 
reas a a ee — 

