IJ2 KELIQUI^E AQUITANKLE. 



Fig. 3. Light-brown, subtranslucent, mottled outside. Broad, spatulate, high- 

 backed, rounded at the ends, both of which have been partially crushed. 

 From Laugerie Haute. 



Fig. 4. Opake shining white (weathered), with light-brown subtranslucent spots 

 of the unaltered flint. Neatly subovate, with straightish sides and bluntly 

 pointed apex ; edge worn. 

 From Laugerie Haute. 



Fig. 5. Grey-mottled (weathered) granular flint. Short and thick ; edges intact ; 

 ends worn. 

 . From Les Eyzies. 



Fig. 6. Subtranslucent brown flint. Well worn at the side-edges, and crushed 

 at the ends. 

 From Laugerie Basse. 



Fig. 7. Greyish brown. Neatly shaped ; acute-ovate or sub triangular. 

 From Laugerie Haute. 



Fig. 8. Another, but larger, neat subovate Scraper of greyish-brown flint. 

 From Laugerie Haute. 



Fig. 9. Subtranslucent, greyish-brown, granular flint, mottled by weathering. 

 Neatly oblong ; rounded at one end only ; less carefully trimmed at the other ; 

 worn on the lateral edges. 

 From Les Eyzies. 



Fig. 10. Dark-coloured spicular flint. High-backed ; ends not quite equally 

 rounded ; worn on the side-edges. 

 From Laugerie Haute. 



Fig. 11. Dark-grey, mottled (weathered), fossiliferous flint. Piece of a thin 

 flake, with a small patch of the crust remaining near one end ; ends unequally 

 rounded. 

 From Laugerie Haute. 



Fig. 12. Dark-brown, coarse, spicular flint. Probably once oblong ; evenly worn 

 on one edge; roughly and unevenly worn away on the other, especially 

 towards the narrower end, where hard scraping and other usage has destroyed 



