88 



INTRODUCTION. 



and shows but little taste in its application. There are numbers 

 also which cannot be classed with any type, as they differ amongst 

 themselves, and more or less from any of the before-mentioned 

 forms, as fig. 73. Others are of very peculiar shape, and of rare 



Fig. ,3. J. 



Fig. 74. *. 



occurrence. For instance, they have been found with four feet, one 

 of these occurred in a barrow at Weaverthorpe [No. xliii], [fig. 

 74] l ; and two very singular vessels, one discovered at Heighing- 

 ton, Lincolnshire [figs. 75, 76] 2 , the other near Corbridge, in 



1 I have seen a second one of this form, found in a barrow at Amotherby, near 

 Malton, in the North Riding. 



2 Archaeol. Journal, vol. xxvi. p. 288. 



