ON METHODS OF DETERMINING THE DRYNESS OF STEAM. 419 



members. They have proved to be the remains of a cousiderable Roman 

 villa, and fragments of hypocaust pipes, Samian ware, and light grey pre- 

 liistoric pottery, together with black pottery and Roman coins, have been 

 found. 



Through the Museum Committee of the Cardiff County Council casts 

 in plaster of two of the most remarkable of these crosses have been 

 secured. These casts have lately been placed in the Cardiff Museum as 

 a nucleus of a typical collection of casts of the ancient inscribed stones 

 and crosses of Glamorganshire. 



In addition, the whole of the known inscribed crosses, with two or 

 three exceptions, have been photographed by Mr. T. Mansell Franklen, 

 the Clerk of the Peace for Glamorganshire, and these are available for 

 purposes of study in the Reference-room of the Cardiff Central Free 

 Library. 



Ethnograpldcal Survey of the United Kingdom. — Second Report 

 of the Committee, consisting of Mr. E. W. Brabeook ( Chair- 

 man), Mr. Francis G-alton, Dr. .T. G-. G-arson, Professor A. C. 

 Haddon, Dr. Joseph Anderson, Mr. J. Komilly Allen, Dr. J. 

 Beddoe, Professor D. J. Cunningham, Professor W. Boyd Daw- 

 kins, Mr. Arthur Evans, Mr. E. Sidney Hartland, Sir H. 

 HowoRTH, Professor R. Meldola, General Pitt-Rivers, Mr. E. G-. 

 Ravenstein, and Mr. G-. W. Bloxam (Secretary). [Draiun up 

 by the Chairman.) 



APPEXDIX PAGE 



I. Form of Scltedzde 42(> 



II. Directions for Measurement 42S 



III. The Etlin,ograi)hical Survey of Ireland. — Report of tlw Committee . . 420 



1. As in the previous year, the Committee have had the advantage of the 

 co-operation of several gentlemen not members of the Association, but 

 delegates of various learned bodies who are interested in the Survey. 

 They have to deplore the loss, by death, of one of these gentlemen, Mr. 

 H. S. Milman, director of the Society of Antiquaries, who had been 

 delegated by that Society and had rendered much assistance in the earlier 

 stages of the work. His place has been filled by the election by the same 

 Society of its Vice-President, Mr. Granville Leveson-Gower, of Titsey 

 Place, as a delegate to this Committee. His colleague, Mr. George Payne, 

 and Mr. E. Clodd, Mr. G. L. Gomme, and Mr. J. Jacobs, the rei^resenta- 

 tives of the Folk Lore Society, Sir C. M. Kennedy, K.C.M.G., representing 

 the Royal Statistical Society, Mr. Edward Laws, the Ven. Archdeacon 

 Thomas, Mr. S. W. Williams, and Professor John Rhys, representing the 

 Cambrian Archaeological Association, and Dr. C. R. Browne, a representa- 

 tive of the Royal Irish Academy, have continued their valuable services. 

 Some other members of the Committee are delegated by the Anthropological 

 Institute. 



2. In their first report the Committee presented a list of 2G-1 villages 

 or places which, in the opinion of competent persons consulted by the 

 Committee, appeared especially to deserve ethnographic study, and they 

 appended to the list observations furnished by their correspondents on the 

 special characteristics of such villages and places, which rendered them 

 typical. This considerable number does not exhaust the supply of names 



E E 2 



