296 



Chr. Bendix Thostbup 



Remarks 



491 

 492 

 493 



494 



495 



49(i 

 497 



498 



Large stones. Ground even in 

 bottom. 



Large stones, some fixed. Doorwaj' 

 very marked. 



Large stones. West wall formed 

 of a large, fixed stone, south wall 

 of a compact row of stones. Thres- 

 hold formed of 2 small stones. 



Large, compactly placed stones. In 

 N.E. part of oval a compact row 

 of stones cut off an oval space, 

 1-00 M. long and 0-50 M. broad. 



Large and ordinary stones, verj' 

 compactly built. Double row of 

 stones in south wall. (Fig. 41). 



In ruins. (Musk-ox). 



Possibh' a shelter. A large stone, 

 058 M. in height, supported bj' 

 smaller, formed the one wall; 

 the stones in the other walls was 

 0-22 M. in height. 



A cross-wall with 050 M. broad 

 opening in the middle ran pa- 

 rallel to the south wall, 0-30 M. 

 from this. North wall prolonged 

 1 M. to the east. (Musk ox). 



A stone structure (499) close to the east of the stone-oval 494 

 consisted of two parallel, compactly built rows of ordinary stones, 

 the one 1-90 M. long, the other 110 M. long, at a distance of 030 M. 

 from each other. The one end was closed by a stone wall and 

 between the rows was paved with flat stones ; it was possibly a shelter. 



The following table gives information regarding the 3 traps. 



484 

 503 

 492 



493 



494 



495 

 502 



3 S.E. 497 



rectang.' 



irreg.^ 



oval 



oval 



oval 



oval 

 square ' 



four- 

 sided 



' The general term stone-oval is retained for these, though their form was not oval. 



