278 R. B. Foote — Notes on some recent Neolithic and fNo. 3., 



3. Hammers a. round. 



h. square. 



4. Ring- stones. 

 6. Pestles. 



6. Corn-crushers, ... globular, IJ" — 2 J" diameter. 



7. Bone-crushers, ... do. 3|" — 5" do. 



8. Strikers, ... a. thick type. 



9. Mealing-stones, ... h. flat type. 



10. Slyking-stones, ... (slick-stones). 



11. Sharpening-stones,... (hones). 



12. Scrapers, ... a. heavy. 



6. light, 

 c. circular. 



13. Worked flakes. 



14. UnT?orked flakes, ... triangular, "knife type," &c., &c. 



15. Cores, small, ... Jabalpur type. 



16. Flakes from small cores. 



17. Beads. 



18. Reddle-stones. 



19. Stone vessels, ... bowl-shaped. 



20. Mealing places, ... deep, on rocks or detached blocks. 



21. Polishing places, ... do. do. 



22. Edging grooves, ... do. do. 



The variety of stone selected for different purposes was consider- 

 able as will be seen by the following lists. 



Varieties of stone selected for use. 



Granite foi' mealing-stones and corn-crushers. 



r mealing-stones, mealing- troughs, polish- 

 Granite gneiss ,, ] ing and edging places on the rocks, 



C deep troughs for water. 



S these were evidently very 

 favourite stones and 

 often fetched from long 

 distances. 

 / celts, scrapers, mealing-stones, corn- 

 Greenstone of several I ^^ crushers, strikers, hammers, pestles, 



varieties ) " ( flakes. 



Quartz very rarely used... „ corn-crushers and scrapers. 

 Siliceous breccia of"\ 



D bar war age, very > „ mealing-stones. 

 rarely used ^ 



