36 
Fig. 1. British coin, pale gold, weight 21 grains: coins of this size and character are fre- 
quently found in Normandy. 
Fig. 2. British, very pure yellowish gold, weight 95 grains. The obverse may represent a 
rude attempt at the delineation of the human head, and the reverse may possibly mean a horse. 
See Ruding, plate 1. nos. 9, 10, 11 and 12, gold coins of nearly the same weight. 
Fig. 3. British, pale gold, weight 89 grains: very similar to a gold coin (no. 2. plate 1. of 
Ruding) weighing 883 grains in the Tyssen cabinet. This coin was found at Worthing, and is in 
the possession of Edward Paul, Esq. ; the other coms represented are in my own collection, except 
those particularly noticed. 
Fig. 4. British, red gold, weight 79 grains: somewhat similar to Fig. 3, but of inferior gold. 
Figs. 1, 2 and 4. were found in digging a ditch close to the shore at Heene. 
Fig. 5. Second brass coi of Vespasian, found on the shore a little to the east of Worthing. 
Fig. 6. British boat made out of an oak-tree, without any metal fastening, eighteen feet long 
by three feet wide, found m 1842 on the shore after a storm, in the mud about 200 yards 
from the beach opposite Heene-lane. Shells of the Post-Pliocene formation were found in it, 
such as Lutraria Listeri, Cardium edule, &e. This boat is similar in its character and construe- 
tion to one found at North Stoke, Sussex, in 1834, and now in the British Museum. 
