170 TRANSACTIONS LIVERPOOL BIOLOGICAL SOCIETY. 





largest measures 2xir long by 1^ broad and | inch thick. 

 The scrapers are small and rudely made. One of yellow 

 flint measuring 1J inch by 1 inch and A thick has the 

 bump of percussion at the broad end, the edges which are 

 sharp and narrow are rounded to a point, and only the 

 edges show secondary working. A scraper of about the 

 same size from one of the huts shows almost no trace of 

 secondary working. An awl, or perhaps a knife, from the 

 huts resembles one figured in Evans "Ancient Stone 

 Implements" figs. 235 and 239, but is smaller and 

 broader in proportion. The point and the butt are 

 rounded and both edges sharpened, but it shows very 

 little trace of secondary working. 



View of circle from the east. (From a photograph taken b}^ Prof. Brady, 

 F.R.S., at Easter, 1893. For the use of the block we are indebted to the 

 kindness of the Editor and Publishers of the " Illustrated Archaeologist.") 



To sum up : — Our examination of these remains shows 

 that the people who inhabited the ancient villages on the 

 Meayll and who erected and used the stone circle, were 



