128 
Stone Materials.—A long, round celt, of syenitic greenstone por- 
phyry, composed of dark-green hornblende, and erystals of pink felspar, 
well polished, 7 inches long, and 22 broad; numbered in continuation 
of the printed Catalogue, 514. 
A curved flint-flake of the knife form, 3 inches long by 1 inch 
broad; No. 1277. Both these specimens formed part of a collection of six- 
teen articles, principally bronze celts and palstaves, procured from Mr. 
J. Dillon, of the county of Limerick, for. . . 2 ey (6 
Thirteen flat pieces of stone, circular, quadrilateral, and oblong, &c., 
most of them perforated, and all more or less ornamented, similar to 
those described at page 125 of the printed Catalogue, and numbered in 
continuation thereof, from 15 to 27, in Rail-case C. They were all 
discovered in the Ballinderry Crannoge, and were bought, along with 
several other articles of bone, bronze, and iron, said to have been disco- 
vered in the same locality, from P. Fagan, TORE yeti 2) sepeeeOeO 
A crystal globe, 12 inches in diameter, encircled with two silver 
bands, to which a handle is attached; one of these cross-bands opens 
with a hinge. It is similar to those erystal balls already in the 
Museum, and described at page 127 of the printed Catalogue, and is 
now No. 3, in Rail-case C. It had been in the possession of the late 
Mr. Boylan, of Grafton-street, for several years, and cost, with the fol- 
lowing article,—. . . . £400 
An oval crystal ornament, set in silver, “having the reverse engraved 
with an Irish scroll, and some vestiges of a fioure. To be registered 
among the Ecclesiastical Antiquities.. 
Earthen Materials.—A very beautiful cinerary urn, now numbered 
49, in continuation of those in the printed Catalogue. It is of the 
vase shape, 54 inches high, 64 in diameter of mouth, and 74 in the 
widest part. Although the material of which it is composed is not of 
so fine a character as that of many of the other urns in the Museum, the 
style of ornamentation is unique, and much more complicated than in 
any other specimen. It was found in a stone chamber at the moat of 
Sionan, near Horseleap, county of Westmeath, and was purchased from 
P. Fagan, FOI May suits - £0150 
Four beads, one of vitrified paste, and three ‘of rough ‘coloured glass, 
purchased. along with the former, and now numbered 181 to 184 in Rail- 
case D. 
Vegetable Materral.—_A sword-shaped piece of black oak, 2 feet 
long, with an aperture in the handle, No. 157, also from Ballinderry. 
Two wooden pins, numbered 15 and 16, in Rail-case E, in conti- 
nuation of page 214 of the printed Catalogue. The former, which 
is 54 inches long, is very beautifully decorated with an indented pattern 
in the form ofa Grecian scroll. Like most of the articles of this de- 
scription, they were found in a crannoge—that of Ballinderry. 
A two-horse yoke, in a very fine state of preservation, and formed out 
of a piece of ash; 2 feet 10 inches long, and resembling No. 142 in 
the printed Catalogue, after the articles in which it follows, as No. 154. 
It was found in the bog of Tubberdony, near Dervock, in the county of 
Antrim, and was purchased from J. O'Donnell, for . . . £0150 
