Mar., 1911.] Proeeedings of the Asiatic Society of Bengal. xcix 
senting a lion chase in which the hunters are clad in armour of 
the style of the fifteenth century. The picture is worth men- 
tioning because drawings with a similar technique discovered 
some time ago near Bijeygarh in Baghelkhand have been as- 
cribed to the prehistoric period. In view of the late period of 
the Raisen drawing it is most probable that those near Bijeygarh 
are also late-medieval, an opinion already advanced in the 
Journal of this Society by Mr. J. Cockburn in 1883. 
(2) Photographs of some fifteenth century tombs at Gwa- 
dar on the Makran Coast, constructed in the Indian style of 
Gujrat. 
Theer are at Gwadar on the Makran coast some ancient 
date 873 Hijri (1468 A.D.). The tombs have been noticed by 
previous travellers, but none of the published descriptions give 
any account of the peculiarities of their architecture. Their 
style is identical with the very remarkable adaptation of Hindu 
architecture to Mahommedan buildings that prevailed in Guj- 
rat during the rule of the independent Mahommedan Kings in 
the fifteenth and sixteenth centuries. It seems to indicate that 
the influence of the powerful kingdom of Gujrat must have 
extended to a considerable distance westward during the latter 
part of the fifteenth century. 
Dr. N. Annandale exhibited specimens of sponges asso- 
ciated with the shells of gregarious molluscs of the family Ver- 
metidae in the Bay of Beng 
In exhibiting the specimens, he explained that the con- 
torted, worm-like shells of the molluscs combined with the 
sponges, which were of almost stony hardness, formed irre- 
gular masses often of considerable size. e sponges exhi- 
_ LH. Burkill exhibited a collection of drugs—‘‘ a 
Lepcha’s Medicine bag’’—and remarked :— 
i hen it suits him. He had for sale 
many scraps of fur intended to be worn to cure sleeplessness ; 
