'.OEATIOW or OAaW-BBEA 



'ormed the bottom, 'and is a granite rock of 



earth-fast. Fo ' have substituted 



i. stone oi the sau: The wood-ash in 



oak, birch, hazel, and alder. Close by, and 



;ere renin 

 g- stone, 

 western <•; 

 >e confident. 

 u group (No. . 

 'ly triangular 

 i.ed in Wilkin: ■ 

 •one side also being a nat 

 large loose stone, and the 



' suppose to have been 

 uroken by the force of 

 .g on it, that it ■v<>-ag 

 oulder dwelling" to the 

 was a veryjpretty two- 

 back of which was 

 iT a natural basin 

 k, the other a 

 ;y paved with 

 iclosure were 

 pottery, 'a good 

 70, the obverse 



blocks. The "finds" in ti 



'(l good, -consisting ox tiuit.. 

 i silver Denarius of A.D 



• and the legend imp cabsab vespasianus 



' "be people) — the reverse shpwing 



> on prow of a ship, holding a 



TR. POT. {i.e. 



> pottery is of 



lie roughest, 



wheel-made, 



stic, and some 



lowed to recognize 



was mostly found 



slope of the hill 



.7 (except 34) and 



u by rows of low 



ind 8i;e;es, but all roughly 



;i..!.; ^ u found all over its surface, 



under the stones in the 



• in by a semicircle of 



■t from the point of the 



we find charred wood with 



i-^ores are gravfes or huts, i do 



Still further south, between Nos. 7 



IS {not shown in detail on plan) but 



-'l.here were practically nil, 



ho pottery y 



Idch in 



los of 4 to 

 at the angle. In no 

 ottery. Whether the^c 

 onture an opinion. 



