804 



REPORT — 1903. 



marked * are extinct, those marked t are extinct in this country but living on tbe 

 Continent. 



2. Saw-edged Palceoliihs. By Mi-s. C. Stopes. 



Among tlie stones collected by Mr. Stopes during tbe last two years of his life, and 

 left by bim at Swanscombe, are a beautiful series of saw-edged palaeolithic flakes 

 and implements from the Craylands gravel pit at Swanscombe. The roughnesses 

 are not the result of accident or use, but are intentional serration, generally on a 

 straight edge, though sometimes continued into the spokeshaves and scrapers so 

 frequently combined in the multum in parvo implements of the period. 



At the York meeting of the British Association, 1881, when Mr. Stopes 

 brought forward his carved Pectunculus from the Ked Crag, as the first recorded 



