lxx LIST OF THE PUBLISHED WRITINGS 



to recommend that in building a house a layer of imper- 

 vious material should be spread over the entire area on 

 which the house is to be built, and not confined to the 

 so-called ' damp course ' which is put into the walls. Also 

 that the small-calibred drain pipes should be surrounded 

 by a layer of gravel, so as to dry a water-logged soil.] 



24. [1868]. On the Modes of Sepulture observable in late Romano- 



British and early Anglo-Saxon Times in this Country. 

 (Transactions of the International Congress of Prehistoric 

 Archaeology, Third Session, 1868: pp. 176-184.) [This 

 paper is mainly based upon investigations conducted in a 

 cemetery at Frilford in Berkshire. Dr. Rolleston subse- 

 quently published in the Archceologia detailed accounts 

 of these investigations, which are reprinted in Articles 

 XXXIV and XXXV.] 



25. [1869]. The Earth Closet System. (Lancet, 6 March, 1869 : p. 319.) 



Article XL VII, p. 923. 



26. [1869]. The Dry Earth System. (A Letter to the Lancet, 20 March, 



1869: p. 411.) [This letter was written in reply to one 

 by the Rev. Henry Moule, the introducer of the dry-earth 

 system for the disposal of sewage. Dr. Rolleston advocates 

 a water system as preferable to a dry-earth system, and 

 points out what he regards as the dangers of the latter.] 



27. [1869]. On the various Forms of so-called 'Celtic' Cranium. 



(Journal of Anatomy and Physiology, III. 1869: pp. 

 252-255.) Article XIII, p. 155. 



28. [1870]. On the Character and Influence of the Anglo-Saxon Con- 



quest of England, as illustrated by Archaeological Re- 

 search. (Proceedings of the Royal Institution, Vol. VI, 

 p. 116; reprinted in Nature, Vol. I, p. 661.) Article 

 XXXVIII, p. 681. 



29. [1870]. The Relative Value of Classical and Scientific Training. 



A Review. (Nature, 1870, Vol. II, pp. 250-252.) Article 

 XLVI, p. 916. 



30. [1870]. Biological Training and Studies. Address to the Biological 



Section of the British Association, Liverpool. (British 

 Association Reports, XL. 1870: pp. 91-109.) Article 

 XLIII, p. 846. 



