52 BULLETIN OF THE LIVERPOOL MUSEUMS. 
these I have discovered there are none which in any way resemble those collected 
by Mr. Seton-Karr in the Wadi, with the single exception of the forms 21 and 
25 (figs. 1 and 2). 

Fig. 2. 
Fics. 1 And 2.—IweLeMENTs IN THE Mayer MvsreuM, FROM THE SETON-KARR COLLECTION. 
“T agree with M. de Morgan in believing that the knives represented at 
Beni Hasan are of copper ; his reply to Mr Griffith, in fact, seems to me to be 
conclusive, and I very much question whether any of the flint tools found by 
Petrie at Kahtin were contemporaneous with the XIIth Dynasty. Wherever 
else stone implements have been found in a site later than the age of the 
IVth, or at most of the VIth Dynasty, excavation has shown, as for instance, 
at El-Kab, that there were ‘prehistoric’ tombs and presumably ‘prehistoric’ 
settlements on the spot. I ought to add that his excavations at El-Kab 
caused Mr. Quibell to come over to M. de Morgan’s views. 
“T have found stone implements of early type on later sites, as, for 
example, a flint knife of your Fig. 32 type (fig. 3) at Elephantiné, and a 
prehistoric axe head in the ruins of a Roman town in Nubia, but they had 
been brought from elsewhere and re-used as hammers or the like. 
