306 



KEPORT 1888. 



Table VII. — Neolithic and Beonze Ages— contiimed. 



Name of Objeot 



Contracted sitting ske- 

 leton ; chipped flints ; 

 broken urn 



Iiocality 



Parcelly Hay 

 (Harting- 

 ton) 



Skeleton contracted ; 

 granite axe head ; 

 bronze dagger 



Fragments of skeletons 

 and burnt bones ; 

 whet-stone ; flint ar- 

 row head ; female 

 skeleton contracted; 

 skeleton of child 



Necklace of jet and 

 bone beads 



Calcined bones ; broken 



urn 

 Contracted skeleton ; 



broken urn 



Skeleton ; bronze celt ; 

 bronze dagger ; jet 

 bead ; circular flint 

 implement 



Burnt bones ; coarse 



urn ; flints 

 Skeleton ; burnt bones ; 



flints ; small coarge 



urn ; 2 skeletons ; 



sirall urn 



Date 



1848 



Middleton 

 Moor, n«ar 

 Arborlow 



Sharp Low.near 

 Tissington 



Near Thorpe 

 Cloud, Dove- 

 dale 



Parwich Moor 



Round Low 

 (Hopton) 



Crake Low 

 (Tissington) 



1848 



Description 



' Ten Tears 

 Diggings,' 

 by T. Bate- 

 man. 'T.Y. 

 D.' used to 

 denote this 

 work. A 

 Descriptive 

 Catalogue 

 of the Anti- 

 quities, &o. 

 preserved 

 in the Mu- 

 seum of 

 Thos. Bate- 



Where 

 Deposited 



Bateman Collec- 

 tion, Westou 

 ParkMuseum, 

 Sheflield 



1848 

 1848 



1848 



1848 



1848 



H 11 



Ins, 



» If 



5-5 

 hgh 



Bemarks 



Cist and skele- 

 ton figured 

 'T.Y.D.,'p. 

 23 



This inter, 

 mentwason 

 the cover- 

 ing stones of 

 the above, 

 axe head 

 perforated ; 

 daggerwith 

 3 studs 



Leaf shaped 

 arrow head; 

 cow's tooth 

 fouud with 

 skeleton, an 

 articleBate- 

 man says 

 imiformly 

 found with 

 the more 

 ancient in- 

 terments 



Consisted of 

 420 beads 

 foundround 

 neck of the 

 woman's 

 skeletoUjSee 

 'T. Y. D.,' 

 figured, p. 25 



This skeleton 

 had been 

 wrapped in 

 a dark red 

 skin, traces 

 of the hair 

 left around 

 it and on 

 the bronze 

 weapons, on 

 which are 

 also traces 

 of fern leaves 

 by which the 

 body was 

 surrounded. 

 ♦T. Y. D.,' p. 

 34 



