252 EELIQUI^: AQUITANKLE. 



5. Nine short, wide, rough, unused Flakes ; one thinner, larger, and rougher than the other. A. Plate 



XXXI. fig. 10. 



6. One thick, short, triangular, bulbed Flake, trimmed straight on one edge to make a broad point. Like 



A. Plate XL. figs. 2, 3, and 5, from Le Moustier. 



7. Fifty-eight simple Flakes, unused; fifty-five whole, three broken. A.Plate XV. fig. 1; Plate XXXI. 



figs. 3, 4, 6. 



8. Fifty-five whole Flakes, large and small, bearing more or less evidence of having been used in cutting, 



scraping, or other work : one is a " Core-end Flake." A. Plate XVI. fig. 7. 



9. Forty simple Flakes, large and small, more or less used and broken. A. Plate II. figs. 8, 14 ; Plate XV. 



figs. 1, 7, 10; Plate XXXI. fig. 7. 



10. Nine fragments of small, thin and narrow Flakes. 



11. Ten Flakes, worn on one or both edges : five with the slope of the scaling on the inner face of the flake ; 



two with it on the outer face ; and three having it alternate. A. Plate XXXI. fig. 1. 



12. Fourteen Flakes, perfect or broken, used on edge or end, some much worn, and one smoothed by use on 



one edge. A. Plate XV. fig. 7; Plate XVIII. fig. 12. 



13. Three Flakes used roughly and smoothed at each end. A. Plate XV. fig. 2. 



14. Two broken Flakes, used at the point. 



15. Ten whole Flakes, with marks of use or of dressing on one or both edges at the but-end. A. Plate XVI. 



fig. 10. 



16. Thirteen Flakes (one broad, ten various, and two broken), used on one or both sides of the point. 



17. Ten Flakes tanged, mostly at the bulb-end, and more or less used. A. Plate II. fig. 14 ; Plate VIII. 



figs. 5, 6, 7; Plate XVI. fig. 11. 



18. Twenty-nine Flakes, of various sizes, tanged at the end opposite to the bulb- end; some used. A. Plate 



II. figs. 15, 24; Plate VIII. fig. 2. 



19. Nine Flakes tanged at both ends, of various sizes, without distinct marks of use. 



20. Eleven scimitar-shaped, pointed Flakes, somewhat like Share-bones*. A. Plate XVIII. figs. 1, 4, 5, 6, 7. 



21. Five chisel-ended Flakes, both narrow and broad, with the end-edge either slightly convex, straight, or 



oblique. (Compare A. Plate XLII. fig. 5, from La Madelaine.) 



22. Six crescent-ended Implements, or Flakes hollowed at the broad thin end. 



23. Two broad-ended Flakes with two hollows and three points worn or chipped out of the terminal edge. 



24. Twenty-seven flakes (two of them tanged), with a broad thin end worn or worked away obliquely and 



hollow, so that a lateral point remains, sometimes sharp, generally blunt. Angle-scrapers and Rimers. 

 A. Plate XVIII. fig. 10. 



25. Fifteen Flakes, some simple, some tanged, and some broken ; worn or dressed at one end to a single 



point, and serviceable as piercers or rimers, side-scrapers, or double angle-scrapers : one short, chipped 

 to a sagittate form, fig. la, 6, page 21. 



26. Fourteen more or less dressed, blade-like Flakes, worn or chipped into a long deep notch on one side at 



one end (Knives, Side-scrapers, or Angle-scrapers ; and Arrow-heads, if regarded with point upwards, 

 which otherwise is supposed to have been inserted in a haft). Nine are worn on the left edge, the 

 worn end being forwards and the ridge-face upwards ; four, on the right edge ; fragments of the sharp 

 end, five. A. Plate XVIII. fig. 10. 



* See also the figures of similar specimens from the Duruthy Cave, Pyrenees, in MM. Lartet & Duparc's 

 Memoir on "Une Sepulture des anciens Troglodytes &c.," 1874, 8vo, Paris, p. 49, pi. 19 (40). figs. 7, 9. 



