14 A Buried Stone in the Kennet Avenue. 



there seems little doubt that all the bones belonged to one skeleton. 

 One of the ulnas was found under the side of the stone, the other 

 in the rubble above it. The bones except for the breakages are 

 sound and in good preservation. Several small pieces of brown 

 and yellow glazed pottery were found in the superficial soil over 

 the stone. 



A DWELLINGS PIT. 



In cutting the trench near the top of the hill (117 yards from 

 the edge of the pond) the men cut through a small pit. This was 

 cleared out and found to be rather oval in shape, some 3ft. by 4ft. 

 and 3ft. deep. It was full, as these small "dwelling" pits usually 

 are, of black earthy material mixed with grains of charcoal: a sarsen 

 muller, or hammerstone, various fragments of coarse handmade 

 pottery, broken bones of sheep, pig, and ox, some of them burnt, 

 some rough flint flakes, including two "scrapers," and burnt flints 

 were found in it. 



