204 ROMAN BROUGH : = ANAVIO. 



The domestic hog is represented by five fragments of jaws 

 belonging to young adults, with the exception of one, in which 

 the milk teeth are in place. There are also two leg bones 

 belonging to young hogs. 



The horned sheep are represented by a frontlet with the 

 characteristic horn-cores sweeping in a divergent direction 

 backwards. 



The horse is represented by one ulna radius with the proxi 

 mate end of the ulna gnawed off by dogs. 



The dog is represented by one tibia, which had obviously 

 been thrown into the refuse heap along with the other bones. 



A series of bones, mostly belonging to the larger breed 

 of domesticated cattle descended from the Urus, consists of the 

 distal ends of meta-tarsals and meta-carpals, which have been 

 sawn off. One is a meta-tarsal of the Bos longifrons breed. 

 There is also the similar part of the meta-tarsal of the sheep 

 or goat. All these are in a different state of preservation from 

 the rest of the bones, and probably belong to a later period 

 than the animals in the foregoing list. There is no case on 

 record of the existence of oxen of the Urus type in Britain 

 during the time of the Roman occupation. 



As I have proved elsewhere, these larger domestic cattle 

 were brought from the Continent by the Low-Germanic 

 invaders, who carved for themselves England out of Roman 

 Britain. 



