By Mrs. M. E. Cunnington. I 



forming the herring-bone pattern, have the appearance of having 

 been impressed by a notched or serrated tool, as is so often th( 

 case on this type of vessel. 



" Drinking Cup," or " Beaker," found with skeleton at foot of stone. \ 



When the stone fell a considerable quantity of loose soil slipped 

 into the cavity among the packing stones, some of which were 

 loosened at the same time. A piece of the rim of the cup, together 

 with a small fragment of Samian ware, and pieces of a modern 

 glass bottle, were found in this loose earth. 



A fragment of the rim of another decorated " drinking cup " was 

 found 2ft. deep among undisturbed packing boulders against the 

 wall of the hole on the opposite side to the burial. A phalange 

 of a sheep or goat and a splinter of bone were found under a flat 

 [boulder lying undisturbed on the floor of the hole. Several frag- 

 ments of pottery that may be Eomano-British (the small piece of 



