io BARROW-DIGGING AT MARTINSTOWN. 



3. Fragment of ditto, depth 0^5 foot in surface mould. 



4. Flint scraper of oval form, but only slightly worked, 

 depth i '5 foot in chalk rubble. 



Found in the " Mound of Mould " and on the Old Surface Line. 



5. Fragment of thin pottery of the Early Bronze Age beaker 

 type, ornamented with lines of square indentations close together ; 

 light red on both sides, black in the interior ; depth 5 feet. 



6. Worked flint of no particular interest, depth 3*4 feet. 



7. Ditto ,, 3 feet. 



8. Flint flake, worked and showing indications of prolonged 

 use, depth 4*2 feet. 



9. Flint saw (Plate III., No. 9), consisting of a long, narrow, 

 thin flake, with fine serrations along one edge 21 teeth in a 

 length of 19 mm. ; along the opposite edge is a notch, worked, 

 probably used for needle-shafting. Depth 6*2 feet. 



10. Grey flint implement (Plate III., No. io), of a type which 

 has sometimes been described as a hollow-scraper, and almost 

 precisely similar to Evans, ist edit., p. 291, fig. 231, from the 

 Yorkshire Wolds* and Pitt-Rivers, Vol. IV., Plate 3 1 1, fig. 7, from 

 Martin Down Camp, South Wilts (Farnham Museum, N. Dorset). 

 It is of somewhat triangular form, with sides of 40 mm., 38 mm., 

 and 34 mm. respectively ; one edge is straight, another is concave, 

 the third convex. One angle is rounded, the others pointed. 

 One face is flat and unchipped, the other face has finely chipped 

 and bevelled edges on the straight and concave side ; the convex 

 edge is only slightly serrated and is bounded at about 12 mm. 

 from the edge by a ridge across the implement. The cross- 

 section in every direction is bi-convex. Greatest thickness 

 4*5 mm. Depth from the surface, 6*7 feet. 



u. Butt end of a roughly-chipped flint celt (Plate III., 

 No. n); greatest thickness 18 mm.; the end is rounded and 



* Exhibited in the Mortimer Museum at Driffield. See Catalogue, 1900, p. 59, 

 fig. 37. 



