70 MR. C. T. TRECHMANN ON 



Axes. — No axes have turned up on this site yet, the only 

 polished implement being the hammer stone to be described 

 later. 



Arrowheads. — Three perfect and four or five fragmentary 

 arrowheads have been found by me on this site. 



i. A perfect, thick stemmed, double barbed specimen 

 measuring if -in., of grey translucent flint rather roughly 

 worked, and showing the surface of the flake on the 

 under side. Plate III., fig. i. 



2. A small double barbed and stemmed specimen of 

 grey mottled flint, unweathered and very sharp and 

 fresh, also rather unsymmetrical. Plate III., fig. 2. 



3. A small, thick, subtriangular specimen in blackish 

 flint. Plate III., fig. 4. 



4. A large, finely worked lance or arrow head measuring 

 2-in. in length by f-in. across in grey flint, very thin and 

 evenly flaked on both sides. This specimen was broken 

 diagonally across about the centre in Neolithic times. I 

 found the two pieces about twenty yards apart, and put the 

 point into my ticket pocket for safety ; when examining 

 the rest of the flints in the train on the way home I found 

 that it fitted the base which I had gathered up with other 

 specimens some distance away. This specimen is worked 

 to a fine point, and cannot have been long in use ; it may 

 have been broken in the making, and the two pieces flung 

 away in different directions ; they show a slightly different 

 condition of surface. Plate III., fig. 5. 



5. Stemmed and double-barbed arrowhead neatly 

 worked out of carboniferous chert. Both barbs and 

 point chipped off. Plate III., fig. 3. 



6. Part of a lozenge-shaped specimen of grey flint. 



Plate III., fig. 9. 



Saws. — Three very definite and characteristic flint saws 

 were picked up on this site, formed of flakes of grey flint 

 delicately notched along one or both edges. The first speci- 



