2 g EELIQULE AQITITANIC^E. 



Fig. 4. Yellowish, translucent, chalcedonic flint, with brownish flocculence ; 

 glazed. This has been a flake chipped along the edges and ends (but on the 

 upper or ridged side only) until reduced to a nearly symmetrical acute oval, 

 with rough but somewhat sharp solid edges and points. Either end fixed in a 

 handle would leave the other as a small strong pointed chisel ; or if either 

 margin were imbedded in a handle, the other would be available as a strong and 

 slightly curved scraping-edge. 

 Laugerie Haute. 



Fig. 5. Part of a thick flake of dark-grey opake flint with Sponge-spicules ; 

 glazed ; reduced at the ends by lateral oblique fractures, and some chipping, 

 to thick wedge-points. Side edges short, parallel, minutely chipped by use. 

 Les Eyzies. 



Fig. 6. Mottled dark-grey rough flake, trimmed as fig. 5, but less regularly; 

 glazed. Part of an old smooth (water-worn ?) surface of the flint remains on 

 the right-hand side of fig. 6. 

 Les Eyzies. 



Fig. 7. Light-brown granular flint, of the same kind as that in fig. 11, PI. VII.; 

 slightly glazed. Piece of a flake, wedge-pointed at one end by an oblique lateral 

 fracture on one side, and by the chipping and crushing of use on the other ; 

 truncated at the other end, with one angle chipped away, and the other recently 

 broken. Side edges unequal, nearly parallel, one chipped by use. Some 

 Hearth-stuff adheres to the specimen. 

 Les Eyzies. 



Fig. 8. A thick, narrow, curved flake of grey flint ; almost wholly whitened and 

 opake by weathering, and highly glazed. The two ends are wedge-pointed. 

 One side of each point, alternately, has been formed by oblique lateral fracture. 

 One of the other slopes has been worn down by hard usage. The remaining 

 slope has been chipped into shape. One of the side edges is irregular and not 

 trimmed ; it has been partly used : the other is nearly straight, chipped, and, 

 by the arching of the flake, well adapted for a " spoke-shave " Scraper, for 

 which it has perhaps been used. 

 Laugerie Basse. 



Fig. 9. A flake of dark-grey flint, with Sponge-spicules ; glazed. At one end 

 this has been wedge-pointed, by the usual oblique converging lateral fractures 



