INDEX. 



109 



Page. 



Menbir, sculptured, at Bally menacb, Scotland 12 



Merchant's Table, Brittany, carving on 18 



Mestorf, Miaa J., custodian of the ArchEeological 



Museum at Kiel 23 



enumeration of cup-stones in 



Schleawigand Holstein 23,24 



illustration from article by 88 



translations by 23, 75 



"Ueber Scbalensteino", cited... 23 



Mexican -method of spinning, illustrated 50 



Mexico, cupped ( stone in 54 



Mickelborougb, Prof. J., description of cupped 



block at Cincinnati 51,52 



Midsummer's-night fire 73,74 



Migration of man inferred from occurrence of cup- 

 stones 17 



Mithras-worship 76 



" Mittheilungen dcr Antiquarischen'Gesellschaft in 



Ziirich ", cited 21 



Moncrieff, Scotland, cup-cuttings on stono within 



stone circle at 13 



Monolith near Dunbar, Scotland, carvings on 13 



Monoliths, sculptures on 9 



Mont-la- Ville, Switzeiland, cup-stone near 21 



Moor, "The Hindu Pantheon", cited 34 



Moravia, cup-stonea in 25 



Morgenitz, Island of Uaedom, cup-marks on church 



in 87 



Morlot, M. A., deacribea stationary mortar (0 in Can- 

 ton of Valais, Switzerland 50 



"Pierrea i ficuulles", cited 59 



Mormon translation of sculpture in Utah 64 



Mortar and pestle for preparation of paint 47 



Mortars m the shape of boulders with cup-shaped 



cavities 56 



Mounds in the Nagpoor district, India 31, 32 



Mont Saiut-Michel, at Camac, Brittany, cup-cnt- 



tinga on roofing-atone of 13, 19 



Much, Dr. M., on cup-stones in Austria 25 



Muldensteine 59 



Museum at Copenhagen, cup-atones in 23 



KiL'l, cup-stones in 23 



St. Germain, casta of sculptures in 82 



N. 



Nagpoor, India, mounds in 31, 32 



Napa Valley, California, rocks with mortar-cavitiea 



in ; 58 



Napfchenateine 24 



"Narrative of the Voyage of H.M. S. Herald", cited. 66 

 National Museum, U. S., pitted and cupped stones 



in 42 e( seq. 



Nanney, France, superstitions of peuplo 89 



Neolithic flint objects, how produced 42 



Neuenkirchen, Prussia, cup-marks on church in 87 



New Grange, Ireland, carvings in cairn of 18, 74 



New Mexico, paint-cups from 47 



Niantic, Connecticut, cupped granite boulder at 52, 53, 54 



Niemegk, Prussia, sculptures on rock near 24 



Nilsaon, Prof. Sven, altar theory 84 



arguments commented on by 



Sir John Lubbock 71 



describeaBaal orBalderStone. 28, 71 

 ' ' Die Ureinwohner des Scandi- 

 navischen Nordens ; daa 



Bronzealter ", cited 28,29,30,85 



Page. 

 Nilsson, Prof. Sven, interpretation of Kivik sculp- 

 tures 30 



on bronze-age ornamentation. 72 



cupped boulders in Sweden. 71 



hammer-stones 41 



Phoenician theory 73 ei seq. 



" The Primitive Inhabitants of 



Scandinavia", ci(ed 41 



North America, primitive lapidarian sculptures in. .41 et 8eq_ 



American cup-stones 47 



hammer-atones 42 



nut-stones 44 



pitted stones 42 



rock-sculptures 60 e( seq. 



Northumberland, rock- sculptures in 15, 17, 81, 82 



Norway, supposed Phoenician traces in 78 



Nut-stones 44 



Nuts, an article of food of the North American In- 

 dians 43 



0. 



Oatlands, Isle of Man, cup-cuttings on block of circle 



surrounding atone cist at 13 



Obelisk, emblematic of the sun-god 72 



Ober-Farrenatiidt, Prussia, cupped rock near 24,85 



Objections to Professor Nilsson's theory concerning 



Phoenician traces in the North of Europe 73, 75 



Occurrence of cup-stones in both hemispheres 8 



Oennarp, Scania, holy-water basin in church at 85 



Ogham characters 68 



Ohio, cup-stones from 46, 47, 48, 49 



Ironten, cupped block from 51 



Ojibwaya, use concentric circles as symbols 62 



Oldcastle, Ireland, cairn near 17 



Oregon, painted rocks in 65 



Orizaba, Mexico, cupped (?) stone near 54 



Ornamentation of the bronze age 72 



Ornaments from Junapani mounds, India 32 



P. 



Pracriti, a Hindoo deity 34 



Paint-cups of earthenware 47 



Painted and carved rock in the Sierra "Waco, Texas. 57 



Painting on rocka practised by Klamath Indians 65 



Panama, rock-sculpturea in 6G 



Paul, Mr. Kobert, experiments in stone-carving 82 



Pebbles with cup-shaped cavities 45, 46 



Pennsylvania, cup-stonea from 47 



Peopling of America 02 



Perth, Scotland, atone circle near 13 



Pestle and mortar for preparation of paint 47 



Petersen, Dr. Henry, antiquity of Danish sculp- 

 tures 26,27 



' ' Notice sur les Pierres 

 Sculpt^ea dw Danemark", 



cited 25,28 



Phallus-worship in India 34 



Phoenicians supposed to have colonized the North of 

 Europe, and to have left traces in Ireland and 



England 71 etseq. 



Piedra pintal 68 



Pierre de Saint-Clement 89 



-Loup 88 



Pierres ^ bassins 59, 60 



^cuellea 7. 60 



