256 Journal of the F.M.S. Museums. [Vou. IX, 1922.] 
judge owing to the fact that termites had constructed a big 
nest on the site. The mound was, I understand, originally 
more or less round in outline, but had been partly dug away 
to obtain laterite, and a square trench had also been cut 
round it. At the base of the mound, where it has been in- 
tersected by the ditch three or four courses of stones, rounded 
by river action, can be observed. ‘These are firmly bedded 
in hard laterite. A few scattered bricks are to be seen in 
the earth above these, and a specimen which I obtained is of 
very similar type to some of those from Kedah Peak. _I was 
informed that nothing of interest was found when the mound 
was prospected for laterite. 
a 
banks of a small river, the Sungai Bujang. It is obviously 
of Hindu origin, and probably represents, according to M. 
J B 
the left hand side, where two arms are visible, one is raised 
hangs beside the body. 
Probably the mound is the remains of a small shrine 
from which the figure came. I am inclined to think that the 
people who were responsible for the structures on Kedah 
Peak were contemporaneous with those who placed the Hindu 
they plundered buildings of the Hindu period of their stone- 
work and bricks. 
at the remains on Kedah Peak are must still remain 
problematical, but I think it possible that the conical struc- 
ture may have been a dagoba, the ting-stone, perhaps, crown- 
ing its summit. The hole (A) which Mr. Irby discovered in 
the pavement presents a problem which I cannot attempt to 
solve. It appears to have been too shallow to have made a 
satisfactory well. 
