2o EELIQULE AQDTTAJSTCJE. 



Fig. 9. Light-brown translucent flint, mottled all over with the opake whiteness 

 due to weathering, especially on the flat side, and at the edges and ends. This 

 is a fragment of a narrow lanceolate implement, very neatly and symmetrically 

 made from a flake by careful chipping of the ridge-face, which has been reduced 

 to a flat-arched outline in the broader part, and is subtriangular where it is 

 narrower. The reduction in breadth has been caused most probably by the use 

 of one edge as a Scraper. Very slight indications of wear occur elsewhere 

 on the edges. [The drawing does not well represent the numerous parallel 

 flakings of this well-chipped implement.] 



Fig. 10. Dark-grey flint, with a lighter-grey portion showing Sponge-spicules 

 and other small organisms; glazed. A broad lance-head (?), worked by bold 

 chipping on both faces. One end broken away. 



Fig. 11. The tapering end of a flake of opake-white flint, minutely chipped on 

 the edges into a sharp symmetrical point, and towards the notched end chipped 

 over the ridge and slopes. The commencement only of the contracted portion 

 remains, owing to fracture ; but the notch probably belonged to a one-sided 

 Scraper, broken off close to the haft, in which the lancet-shaped end was 

 inserted. 



Fig. 12. Light-brown translucent flint, weathered (especially on one face). This 

 is a large portion of a long blade-like instrument, with nearly parallel sides. 

 It is broken short off at one end ; and has a symmetrical, sharply tapering, 

 flattish point at the other. Both faces have been reduced by free chipping ; 

 the face figured in the Plate is rather more convex than the other. The 

 parallel edges of the broad part show no signs of having been used ; but the 

 angular end has the peculiar crushed and shivered condition due to its having 

 been worn down by the use of its edges, which are affected mostly on alternate 

 sides, the upper side on the right of the figure, and the under side on the left 

 hand. Under these circumstances, we may suppose that the blade-like portion 

 was held in the hand or fixed in a handle. 



Note. In. the following Table, for the specimens that have been broken, the actual measurements are placed 

 in brackets ; and the estimated length is entered in the column, for comparison with the other specimens. 



