410 Transactions of the South African Philosophical Society. 



An examination of these line engravings could, alone, enable one to 

 judge if the technique of the work is really very dissimilar from the 

 engravings done by pointing. I am informed that in the Prince 

 Albert District line engravings, very shallow, are of common occur- 

 rence, but as the sketches shown me are those of a woman with 

 European dress, &c, and the lines are merely scratched, they need 

 not be taken here into consideration. Mr. Parkinson informs me 

 that after he had shown some of the men on the farm, hybrid 

 Korannas, the engraved rocks, one of them set immediately to carve 

 one in line, but it was a man on horseback. 



iy-y-/ 



Fig. 15, 



It is worthy of note that the figures of man are very poor in 

 design, and very inferior to those of the animals. Mr. A. du Toit, 

 of the Cape Geological Survey, has very kindly sketched for me the 

 engraving at Warrenton, on the Vaal Eiver, of what appears to be 

 the figure of a baboon in an erect, semi-human attitude ; associated 

 with it is a zebra conspicuously striped all over the body. At 



