SUPPLEMENTAL NOTES. 295 



pins, passed through the cartilage of the nose, and worn by the inhabitants of the 

 Marquise Islands (' Voyage deMandane,' publiee parCharton: 'Voyageurs anciens 

 et modernes,' vol. ix. p. 201), some Australians, and others. See page 97. A fea- 

 ther is sometimes thus worn : Ogle's ' Colony of Western Australia,' 8vo, London, 

 1839, p. 56. Near Torres Strait, Inner Passage, a Native in a canoe was seen by 

 Mr. T. Baines to thrust his tobacco-pipe through his septum nasi, as a convenient 

 method of carrying it ; and Dr. Robert Brown has seen Vancouver Indians (who 

 often wear nose-pendants) put their clay pipes out of the way, in the perforated 

 septum nasi; and he informs us that the "Hioqua" shell (Dentalium pretiosum, 

 Nutt.), used as money by most of the North-western Tribes, is often used as a 

 Nose-ornament in the way described. One of the usual kinds of bone implement 

 worn by the Australians in the nose is figured in Stokes's ' Discoveries in Aus- 

 tralia,' 1846, pi. 1. fig. 10 ; and needles or awls of bone, like our fig. 1, are figured 

 in his pi. 4. figs. 9-12. 



Page 59, A. Plate XIII., line 16. After made insert partly by chipping and 

 partly. 



Page 60, line 1. After food, insert and cracking nuts. 

 line 2. After paint, insert medicines,. 



Page 60. Pestles. The Marquis de Vibraye obtained from the Cave at d'Arcy, 

 in a deposit referred by him to the Reindeer Period, a smooth oblong stone, 

 5 inches long, 3^ inches broad, and 2 inches thick, somewhat conical at one end, 

 and slightly convex at the other and broader end, which has the appearance of 

 having been adapted to the purposes of stamping and grinding, as a kind of 

 Pestle or Rubber. 



Page 6 1, A. Plate XIII., lines 1 and 2. For dirty-red jasper read clayslate 

 stained red. See A. Plate XXIII. fig. 3, p. 109. 



Page 6 1 (footnote), A. Plate XIII. A similar implement from Aurignac is 

 figured in the 'Annales des Scien. Nat.' se"r. 4, Zool. vol. xv. pi. 10. fig. 3. 



Page 62, A. Plate XIII. The figured specimen of a stone bowl in the ' Catalogue 

 Mus. R. Irish Acad.' p. 114. fig. 88, presents too large and deep a cavity for an 

 analogue to our hollowed pebbles. 



Page 67 (footnote), B. Plate VII. & VIII. Besides the specimen " fig. 3," the 

 following may be added : B. Plate II. figs. 3, 7, 8 ; III. & IV. figs. 1, 4, 5, 6 ; 

 VII. & VIII. figs. 3, 6, 7 : see page 180. 



Page 68, B. Plate IX., line 11. See also 'Annales des Sc. Nat.' se"r. 4, Zoologie, 

 vol. xv. p. 253, pi. 13. fig. 7; from Massat. 



Page 68, B. Plate IX., line 16. See also 'Ann. Sc. Nat.' ibid. p. 251, pi. 11. fig. 1; 



