726 REPORT—1904. 
almost exactly similar, and must have been the work of the same hand. The 
ogival curve is very pronounced in them. The tools found in the clay are almost 
entirely devoid of patination, the edges being as sharp as when newly fashioned. 
Among those from the gravel was a minute, delicately worked implement, 
which appeared to have been made in imitation of a larger pointed weapon. This 
is believed to be a toy-tool made for a palwolithic child. Such tools are rarely 
found in England, but have been recognised on the Continent. It may, however, 
be a forerunner of the neolithic arrowhead, though the finding of an equally 
minute ovate implement, for which it is difficult to imagine a use, is against this 
explanation. 
An implement of quite unique pattern—also found in the gravel—may be 
described as a cutting tool with a concave edge. 
Side by side with implements of the roughest possible work were some care- 
fully wrought specimens. 
On the chalky crust of a few flints either tool-marks or glacial scratchings are 
very distinct. 
A boring made from the greatest depth at which tools were found, namely, 
123 feet, showed that the boulder clay was 15 feet below the implements. This 
demonstrated that the depression had been partially silted up before man’s appear- 
ance, and that the silting continued later, burying the remains and filling up the 
valley. 
The only remains found were fragments of the teeth and tusks of elephas sp., 
rhinoceros, ox, and deer; but these were 24 feet below the implements in coarse 
gravel. 
Below this, again, in the underlying clay, were blackened thread-like fibres, 
probably the rootlets of water plants. 
3. Report on the Lake Village at Glastonbury.—See Reports, p. 324. 
4. Reports on Excavations on Roman Sites in Britain.—See Reports, p. 337. 
5. Some Funeral Customs of the Todas. By Dr. W. H. R. Rivers. 
6. On a Votive Offering from Korea. By E. Stpney Hartianp. 
The author exhibited a votive offering from a shrine on the top of the Char- 
yong Pass, in Korea, about 61 7 south of Gensan. It is a rough iron casting, 
6 inches long, nearly 2 inches high, and weighing about 14 1b., of an animal, 
said to be a tiger. A shrine of some kind is found at the top of every pass in the 
south and south-east of Asia. Usually it is a mere heap of stones, or of sticks, or 
leaves, to which the passing traveller is expected to add his contribution. Some- 
times, however, it is more pretentious, and attracts more shapely and even valuable 
offerings. It is, as a rule, dedicated to the local genius or divinity. The Korean 
mountains are infested with tigers, which are greatly feared by the natives, and to 
which supernatural powers are attributed. They were formerly worshipped, and 
it is probable that the cult still exists. If so, the shrine from which this offering 
was taken may be dedicated either to the tiger itself or to the mountain-god 
under that form. 
7. Notes on the Fulahs of Nigeria. By EH. F. Martin. 
Nigeria is peopled by many and varied races, the seaboard being exclusively 
inhabited by Negro tribes, the Hinterland by Fulahs, Hausas, Nupés, &c. The 
three latter are mostly Mahommedans, the other tribes pagans. The land is fertile, 
