Armstrong — Associated Finds of Irish Neolithic Celts. 85 



A partly ground flint celt and a flint scraper were found, presumably 

 together, at Dunboy, near Ballymoney, Co. Antrim. They were obtained 

 by the Academy from the late Mr. S. F. Milligan, m.u.i.a. 



Co. Cavan. — A polished stone celt, with a square-shaped butt, two urns, 

 only one of which has been preserved (a food- vessel of advanced form), 

 a flint knife, a flint fabricator, and an object of bone, were discovered 

 together in a eist in a tumulus at Killicarney, Co. Cavan. The objects 

 were presented to the Academy in 1879 by the Earl of Enni.skillen, 

 through Mr. Loftus Tottenham, M.P. The urn, celt, and other objects have 

 been figured and described by the late Mr. W. F. Wakeman. 1 



Co. Fermanagh. — A polished stone celt, with a rounded butt, made of 

 amygdaloidal porphyrite, was found with burnt bones and charcoal in the south 

 side of the earn, on Topped Mountain, near Enniskillen, Co. Fermanagh. 2 



Fio. 3. 

 Stone celts found at Canrower, Oughterard, Co. Galway. (One-fourth.) 



Co. Galway. — Three stone celts were discovered under the root of a large 

 deal tree, in the shallow bog of the townland of Canrower, near Oughterard, 

 Co. Galway. They were found by a man named Naughton, (who), "Having dug 

 round the root, he put his hand under it to raise it, and brought out these 

 stone hatchets." 3 The three cells (Fig. 3) are stated to be made of siliceous, 



1 Journal Royal Society of Antiquaries of Ireland, xv, pp. 189-194. 

 - Plunkett and Coffey, Proc. Royal Irish Academy, xx, pp. GOG, 667 ■ 

 3 Wilde, Catalogue of the Antiquities of Stone in the Museum of the Royal Irish 

 Aaulemy, 1857, pp. 58, 59. 



