124 History of the Sarsens. 
About two miles N.W. of Lambourn, Berks, the following have 
been measured :—! 
Length. Breadth. Thickness. Solid Contents Weight. 
No. Feet. Feet. Feet. in cubic feet. Tons. 
1 8 2°5 } 75 4 
2. 4: 2 35 28 2 
3. 4 4 2 82 24 
4. 10°5 2 2 42 3 
5. 5 8 3°5 52°5 3} 
6. 8 3°5 2 56 4 
| 8 5°5 1to2 - 66 (about) 4% 
8 12 6 u 72 5 
9. 6°5 6.5 2 84°5 6 
10. 9 5 2 90 64 
DE. 8 85 5 840 224 
In Welford-Woodlands, near Hangmanstone Lane, Berks :— 
Length. Breadth. Thickness. Solid Contents Weight. 
Feet. Feet. Inches. in cubic feet. Tons, 
10—12 9 25 108 (about) 13} (about) 
At Wormstall Farm, south of and not far from Wickham, Berks, 
there is a large flat Sarsen, nearly two tons in weight. 
On the north side of the Kennet, in a valley near Marlborough, 
there is a conspicuous block, 138ft. long, lOft. broad, 7ft. thick, 
containing about 850 cubic feet, and weighing about 57 tons, ‘This 
looks like a small hut at a distance.” (Whitaker.) 
At Avebury (Aubury or Abury), in the great circle, is one of 
these stones 16ft. high, and estimated to weigh 63 tons. One 
nearly in the “ Kennet Avenue” is 12ft. high, 63ft. broad, and 
3sft. thick. 
Lord Pembroke (Stukeley tells us) estimated the “ general 
in Wilts to Abingdon, and on the downes about Royston, &c., as far as Hunting- 
don, are here and there those Sarsden-stones.’” Aubrey’s ‘‘ Natural History of 
Wiltshire,” edited, &c., by John Britton, 1847, p. 44. 
‘“‘Greywethers . . . . These Downes look as if they were sowen with 
great stones very thick,” &c., p. 314. Aubrey and Jackson, 1862, 
1 Mem. Geol. Surv., Sheet 13, 1861. 
