300 EELIQUIJE AQUITANKLE. 



Page 139. A nodule of Pyrites, used as a Briquet by the Cave-folk, is referred 

 to by Dupont, ' L'Homme ' &c., 2nd edit. 1872, p. 153, fig. 29. See also above, 

 p. 251, no. 32. 



Pages 142 and 143, B.Plate XIX. & XX. fig. 1. The long-eared figure of a 

 Horse. It is suggested by M. de Mortillet in the 'Materiaux,' vol. iii. 1867, 

 p. 210, that there might have been a race of Horses having long ears. 



Page 145, line 11. For terete-pointed read terete, pointed. 



Page 159, B.Plate XXIV. figs. 1 and 3. Perhaps the pitted figures were in- 

 tended to represent dappled Deer, or rather Fawns of Red Deer, which are always 

 somewhat dappled. 



Page 1 60, B. Plate XXIV. fig. 5. The figures were probably intended for some 

 kind of Waterfowl. 



Page 1 60, B.Plate XXIV. fig. 7. This figure has a decidedly Asinine aspect, 

 both as to the head and tail ; and so has the figure on the reverse, but not so 

 strikingly. 



Page 161, fig. 31. This barbed Lance came probably from the Gambier Islands, 

 Low Archipelago. See Beechey's 'Voyage to the Pacific,' London, 1831, p. 143. 



Page 161, line last but one. For Society Islands, read Gambier Islands. 



Page 172, line 7. After 120, insert 136,. 



Page 1 80, B.Plate XXX. & XXXI. Pogamagans. Besides those mentioned in 

 the text, there are some other Pogamagans figured in the ' Materiaux,' and else- 

 where, from Caves of the Reindeer Period : 



1. In the 'Materiaux,' ser. 2, vol. iv. 1873, p. 352, pi. 22. figs. 1, 3, and 4 represent 'two "Batons" of 



antler, from Veyrier, Savoy, and of the Reindeer Period. Fig. 1 has a single central hole in the 

 slightly dressed butt, and belongs probably to the Arrow-straighteners ; the other (figs. 3 and 4) had 

 a relatively large perforation, but is broken. Both bear obscure outlines and other marks. 



2. In the same volume, p. 446, figs. 77 and 78 represent an imperfect Baton (from the Arudi Cave, in the 



Pyrenees), with its butt cut down to a ring (broken), with two associated carvings of half-faces of a 

 horned and bearded Goat-like animal. On one side the horn projects, with a slight curve, on the 

 stem ; and on the other the head is reversed and has its horn curved outwards and downwards by the 

 jowl, like that of a Musk-ox. From the mouth extends a long line, with numerous short lateral lines, 

 either single and oblique, or in pairs and at right angles to the median line. 



3. In the ' Materiaux,' ser. 2, vol. v. 1874, p. 288, fig. 104, a woodcut is given of a sculptured "Baton" of 



Reindeer horn, having the butt shaped into a distant resemblance of a head of Bird, Snake, or Fish, 

 and the stem somewhat attenuated and marked with groups of lines, straight, oblique, and zigzag, 

 which possibly may have been the symbol for water. It is from Laugerie Basse (the Abbe Landesque's 

 Collection). This implement, having the perforation single, and central in the fashioned butt, may 

 have been an Arrow-straightener rather than a Pogamagan. 



4. Similar Implements of antler were found in the Kesslerloch, near Thiiingen ; ' Mittheilungen antiquar. 



