88 



INTRODUCTIOX, 



and shows but little taste in its application. There are numbers* 

 also which cannot be classed with any type, as they differ amongst? 

 themselves, and more or less from any of the before-mentioned 

 forms, as fig. 73. Others are of very peculiar shape, and of rare 



J-'it;- 73. 



^^^'^'''"^^ 





Fig. 74. i. 



occurrence. For instance, they have been found with four feet, one 

 of these occurred in a barrow at AVeaverthorpe [No. xliii], [fig. 

 74] ' ; and two very singular vessels, one discovered at Heighingr 

 ton, Lincolnshire [figs. 75, 76] ^ the other near Corbridge, in 



' I have seen a second one of this form, found in :i barrow at AniotlicrLy, near 

 Malton, in the North Riding. 



^ Archseol. .Journ il, vol. xxvi. p. 288. 



