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Dark Grey Pottery, of coarse texture, and unglazed both outside 
and in. 
Bluish Grey Pottery, thick and of coarse manufacture. 
Light Buff Coloured Pottery, of very coarse texture and unglazed. 
Pale Red Pottery ; an example of the rim of a large vase of good 
outline. 
Darker Red Pottery ; examples of the rim and bottom of a vessel. 
British Samian Pottery, a deep red colored fragment of a vessel 
resembling Samian, and agreeing with Gen. Pitt Rivers’s 
description of an imitation of Samian made in Britain. 
Sundry Examples of Rims and Handles, of vessels of various 
shapes and different kinds of pottery. 
Sundry Examples of Ornamental Pottery, which in all cases are 
of a very simple character. 
Pellets ; a few baked pellets of which a few were met with 
during the excavation. 
Not being an expert, the writer has made no attempt to 
identify these examples with the pottery of any particular age, 
but it may be observed that they agree very closely with many 
of those described in Gen. Pitt Rivers’s books on the Romano 
British pottery found in the Cranbourne Chase, and that they 
are very similar to many of those found by Mr. Arthur Bulleid in 
the Lake village at Glastonbury, except as regards the latter, it 
may be remarked that, down to the time when he read his paper 
before the Somerset Archeological Society in 1894, no single 
fragment of Samian ware had been discovered there, while in the 
Kilmersdon Lane Quarry it has been fairly abundant. 
Bones and Teeth :—Intermixed with the other remains already 
described, there have been found nearly 400 bones and teeth of 
various kinds, many being rather fragmentary but all of them in 
a good state of preservation. Amongst them the remains of the 
following animals have been identified, viz:—The Horse, Cow, 
Sheep, Pig, Dog, Cat and Hedgehog, as well as a number of 
bones belonging to birds and fishes. 

