258 



Original Articles. 



[April, 



Butimeyers Table, enlarged by Lubbock — (continued). 



47. Golden Eagle 



48. Owl . . 



49. Starling 



50 



51 



52 



53 



54 



55. Swan . 



56. Wild Goose 



57. Perch . . 



58 



58 



60 



Aquila fulva . 



„ lialisetus . 

 Strix alves . 

 Sturnus vulgaris . 

 Cinclus aquaticus . 

 Tetras bonasia . 

 Ciconia alba 

 Fulica atra . 

 Larus .... 

 Cygnus musicus . 

 Ansersegetum . 

 Perca fluvialis . 

 Scardinius erythrop 



thalurn . 

 Cliondrostoma nasus 

 Lota vulgaris . 



+ 



Bronze. Iron 



1 signifies a single individual. 



2 



several. 



3 



species common. 



4 



very common. 



5 



great numbers. 



x 



a trace. 



+ „ 



added by Lubbock 



EXPLANATION OF PLATE. 



At the top of the Plate is a Swedish Cromlech taken from a drawing in Sjoborgs 

 Samlingar for Nordens Fomalskave. This is similar to many in this country which 

 are sufficiently well known. 



The view in the centre is taken with some modification from a conjectural 

 restoration of the Platform of a Lake-dwelling at Wauwyl, on Lake Pfaffikon, in 

 Switzerland, by Dr. Ferdinand Keller, and published by him in the ' Proceedings 

 of the Antiquarian Society of Zurich.' A corresponding view from an earlier 

 paper by the same author forms the frontispiece to Sir Chas. Lyell's ' Antiquity 

 of Man.' 



The figures on each side of this view represent a bronze sword and dagger. 



1. Stone celt with wooden handle, apparently of pine, 13£ inches long, found 

 in County of Monaghan. From Sir W. K. W. Wilde's Catalogue of the Museum of 

 the Royal Irish Academy. 



2. Stone celt with bone handle, copied from Linderschmidts Altherthiimer 

 unserer heidnischen Vorzeit. About 8 inches, long. 



3. Stone celt with wooden handle, from Little Fish River, in Africa. From 

 Wilde's Catalogue 



