PARISH OF GOODMANHAM. 317 



part of the barrow were found several bones of a large and old ox 

 and some of a young one, and the frontal bone of a young ruminant, 

 which has more the appearance of sheep than of goat. 



CVII. The next barrow was 80 ft. in diameter, 3J ft. high, and 

 made entirely of earth. At the centre was a shallow grave, 6ft. in 

 diameter, and sunk to a depth of 10 in. through the surface-soil 

 on to the chalk rock. Two feet below the surface of the barrow, and 

 over the top of the grave, was a very remarkable and diminutive 

 vessel of pottery, quite plain, 1 in. high, |- in. wide at the mouth, 

 the same at the bottom, and swelling a little at the middle [fig. 135]. 



Fig. 135. i. 



It is vain to conjecture to what use so very minute a vessel could 

 have ever been put; it was not found in connection with an 

 interment, for though above the grave it was not even within its 

 limits, much less in association with the body found therein. It 

 was simply placed amongst the material of the barrow as any 

 casual piece of pottery or flint chipping might have been, and 

 whether it was deposited there without any nearer relation to a burial 

 than such articles may be supposed to have had it is quite impossible 

 to say \ At the bottom of the grave was the body of a large and 

 strongly-built man, laid on the left side, with the head to S.E. ; the 

 hands were too much decayed to admit of their position being ascer- 

 tained. Amongst the material of the barrow were three pieces of 

 plain dark-coloured pottery and some bones of a young child, also of 

 red-deer and of a fox. 



C VIII. Closely adjoining the last was a barrow 48 ft. in diameter 

 and 1 ft. high. It had apparently been disturbed on a previous 





In the York Museum is a vessel almost the counterpart of this. It was found in 

 a barrow at Hutton Cranswick, in the East Riding-. Proc. of Yorkshire Philos. Soc. 

 1847-54, p. 185. 



