1913.] NOTES OX SUMMER EXCURSIONS. 37 



Museum many later implements with the triangular section. 

 I speak of these as being ridged or keeled, and I have noticed 

 that others have had the ridged form and been flaked so as to 

 remove the ridge longitudinally. I think these forms are the 

 result of evolutionary sequence. 



There is the fact that the Herm " eolith " has the form 

 of true implements. It was found associated with the 25 foot 

 beach and that fact sent me to the same beach in Guernsey. 

 Although I have searched far and wide I have been fortunate 

 enough to find only one, but I do not feel confident about its 

 being an artefact. 



On the other hand, out of Mr. Morgan's prolific garden, 

 one has turned up which has better claim to being an eolith 

 than my second. This conforms more nearly to the type 

 specimens. 



We now have three eoliths in Jersey and three in 

 Guernsey. These no doubt will be added to during our next 

 year's outings. 



The year's excursions have failed to add to our collection 

 of Neolithic implements, but I show two very rough stones 

 which have been used by man. They illustrate the fact that 

 neolithic men, or possibly neolithic boys, would pick up from 

 the beach stones which approached celts in shape and use 

 them without submitting them to further shaping. Mr. Curtis 

 found one of these at Cobo and I found the second at Kocques 

 Barrees, Vale. 



Many such rough stones have found places in our 

 museums and there can be no doubt that such were used in 

 their rough state for temporary purposes. 



An interesting discovery was made on the top of the 

 Vardes quarry of three stone graves, which, owing to the 

 quarry extension it was necessary to remove. Mr. Carey 

 Curtis, the Secretary of the Society, carefully planned and 

 measured them, and by arrangement with the Lukis Museum 

 Committee the graves were carefully removed and reset in 

 their relative positions, and with the correct orientation in 

 the space in front of the Lukis Museum entrance. 



The graves were empty and without covering stones. 

 They were small, about two feet in length. 



