360 Proceedings of the Royal Irish Academi/. 



The bones and teeth, found at this place were submitted to Professor 

 Newton, of Magdalene College, Cambridge, and he found them to be 

 bear (one tooth), red deer, two cetaceous bones, one of which had been 

 sharpened for cutting or scraping, also the teeth of a small species of 

 horse. 



The Eev, W. A. Adams, of Antrim, has shown me several finds 

 which he made in various sites in counties Donegal, Antrim, and Down, 

 which he intends publishing an account of at an early date. The 

 following is a list of the articles found : — 



Rosapenna, county Donegal. — Five hammerstones and small polished 

 Celt, rechipped at butt, also three circular discs of the kind found at 

 Horn Head and Ballyness (see Proceedings, 3 series, vol. in., No. 4, 

 figs. 6 and 7). 



Lettermacivard, county Donegal. — A flint scraper, a flake of 

 crystalline rock dressed like a scraper, half of hammer and anvil stone 

 combined, frontal bone of a human skull, and further along on same 

 range of sandhills several pieces of pottery and fragments of iron. 



• Inishfree, county Donegal. — A bronze needle, a paddle supposed of 

 whalebone, several pieces of pottery, and the lower half of a quern. 

 He got from a person living on the island a whetstone of black colour, 

 with small hole in one end. 



Castlegoland^ county Donegal. — A piece of pottery and upper half of 

 a mill stone. 



His other finds at Rutland Island, Maghery, and Loughros More, 

 county Donegal, and Dundrum, county Down, are enumerated at the 

 end of my reports on those sites. Those at Whitepark Bay are of a 

 very interesting kind, and I refer to them under the heading of " Finds 

 of Bronze and Iron Ages." 



Small Borers, Knives, and Scrapers, 



I have ah'eady described the find of small borers from Grangemore, 

 but as minute implements of flint are receiving a good deal of attention 

 from Antiquaries at present I shall deal with the subject more fully. 

 Besides the borers from Grangemore I have in my collection a number 

 of very small implements from various parts of the North of Ireland, 

 some of which are borers, some scrapers, and others may have been used 

 as knives. Similar small tools have been found in other countries, for 

 example, in England, France, Egypt, and India. Some years ago Eev. 

 Canon Greenwell, e.r.s., sent me a few very small borerlike objects of 

 flint to see if anything like them was found in Ireland, and again about 



