CONTENTS. 



Page 



PLATE XXVIII. Illustrates four different types of flint Implements from the Cave at Le Moustier. 

 Fig. 5, a carefully dressed long ovate Arrow-head, belongs to a type known at Le Moustier by 

 this specimen only 



PLATE XXIX. Two pieces of schist, engraved with figures of Animals, and three pieces of worked 



stone, more or less rounded, and engraved with lines IZ 7 



PLATE XXX. Pieces of stone used in grinding and polishing. Fig. 1 appears fitted for polishing flat 

 and grooved surfaces of wood or bone, or for flattening seams in sewn skins. Figs. 2, 3, 4, and 5 

 are of soft sandstone, and have been used in the rounding and sharpening of splinters and spfflets 

 of bone, intended for needles, awls, arrow-points, &c ' 2 9 



PLATE XXXI. Common flint flakes, of which some are more or less dressed into shape 131 



PLATE XXXII. Examples of Scrapers, Lance-heads, Knives, &c 33 



PLATE XXXIII. Some interesting specimens of stonework, consisting of Lance-heads, Scrapers, or 



Knives, including two broken Semilunes 1 3^ 



PLATE XXXIV. A series of the common round-ended Scraper-like Implements, or simple flakes more 



or less dressed and rounded at one or both ends, are here figured 138 



PLATE XXXV. Five specimens from the Gorge d'Enfer, comprising two pieces of large spatulate 

 Scrapers (figs. 1 and 2), one long simple Scraper (fig. 3), one handsome Scraper with both ends 

 rounded (fig. 4), and one simple flake (fig. 5) 151 



PLATE XXXVI. Flint flakes from the Gorge d'Enfer, four of which have been more or less dressed 

 into symmetrical Implements for chiselling (figs. 1 and 3), or for Scraping (figs. 1, 3, and 4), or 

 as a Spear-head (fig. 2). The others are simple flakes, one of which (fig. 5) has been used as an 

 Implement ready to the hand of the Savage 153 



PLATE XXXVII. Three simple unused flakes, the waste in dressing blocks, and three large coarse 



flakes dressed as Scrapers or Choppers, of different shapes 155 



PLATE XXXVIII. & XXXIX. Several of the large clumsy Knives, Choppers, or one-edged cleaver-like 

 flint Implements from Le Moustier. Each is carefully dressed to a sharp hatchet-edge, usually 

 curved, along one margin, and elsewhere retaining some portion of the surface and outer crust of 

 the original flint nodule 171 



PLATE XL. A series of Flint Implements formed of dressed flakes, from the Moustier Cave 173 



PLATE XLI. A miscellaneous group of dressed and worn Implements, made out of flint flakes, and two 



simple flakes of quartz (figs. 4 and 11); from various Stations 175 



PLATE XLII. A selection of specimens, comprising flint Tools which must have been in use with the 



old Cave-folk in their ordinary work of flaying, cutting, scraping, boring, &c 183 



B. BONE IMPLEMENTS &c. 



PLATE I. The specimens figured in this Plate are Hunting- or Fishing-Implements, made of Reindeer's 

 Horn. "Whether Arrow- or Harpoon-heads, all, both large and small, have on each side recurved 

 points, hooks, or barbs cut out of the sides, sometimes opposite, sometimes alternate. The upper 

 end, more or less elongated and pointed, is sometimes rounded and nearly smooth 9 



