By the Rev. E. H. Goddard. 407 



settlement on Cold Kitchen Hill, near Warminster.^ The ornament 

 carved on it is a form of the Greek " Palmetto " so often found in 

 Late Celtic decoration. It is probably of Eoman date, but its style 

 is British and not Eoman. It is in the Society's Museum at 

 Devizes. Length Ifin. 



Sir John Evans, in h.\s,Bronzc Implements (1881), p. 369, mentions 

 a large bronze pin, 13|in. long, found on Salisbury Plain, and now 

 in the British Museum {Proc. Soc Ant., 2nd Series, vol. iii., 469) 

 with a flattened head ornamented on one side with a pattern, 

 which he assigns to the Late Celtic period. 



In addition to the gentlemen mentioned in the course of the 

 foregoing notes I have also to thank Dr. Blackmore, of Salisbury ; 

 Mr. T. H. George, Curator of the Northampton Museum ; Mr. A. 

 G. Wright, of the Colchester Museum ; and Mr. T. W. Colyer, of 

 the Heading Museum ; for much information and assistance. 



I have only to add that I should be grateful for any further 

 information as to the occurrence of the types of fibulae I have 

 mentioned, and especially as to their occurrence in the County of 

 Wilts. 



' See Wilts Arch. Mag., xxvii., 279—291. 



