By W. Jerome Harrison, F.G.S. 



129 



Sprules, Jno. Visitors' Illustrated Pocket-Guide to 

 Stonehenge, etc. ; 8vo., 64 pp. : Oxford. 

 Stonehenge was built by a Phoenician colony about 2000 B.C. 



Squier, E. <x., and E. H. Davis [1811—1888]: Archaeologist. 

 1848. Ancient Monuments of the Mississippi Valley; 4to., 

 xxxix., 306 ; illustrated : (Smithsonian Institution, Vol. I. :) 

 Washington. p> 



For comparison with Avebury see especially pp. 96 — 98 : (with plate of the 

 " Great Serpent " earthwork, in Ohio.) 



Squier, E. Cr [1821 — 1888] : American archaeologist. 

 1851. The Serpent Symbol, and the worship of the Keciprocal 

 Principles of Nature in America ; 8vo., xvi., and 11 — 254 . 

 illustrated : New York. 



Chap. X., pp. 232 — 242 deals with " Serpentine Structures in the Old 

 World " ; including Abury, Stanton Drew, etc. 



Stackhouse, Thos. [1756—1836]: Antiquary. 

 1806. Illustrations of the Tumuli or Ancient Barrows; 

 8vo., viii., 33 ; with folding plate : London. 



The barrows were watch-towers and signal-stations, as well as monuments 

 to the dead. 



Stackhouse appears to have also published (seventy-five copies only, for 

 private distribution) in 1833 " Two Lectures on the Eemains of Ancient 

 Pagan Britain." 



1806(?). Lectures on Architectural Eemains of Britain; 



4to., 76 pp. ; illustrated. 



For Stonehenge (with two plates) see pp. 25 — 36 ; and for Abury, pp. 20 — 25 

 (with two plates). They were circular temples. 



'Stanley, S. S. 1885. Hecat^eus, etc. Nature, XXXII., 574. 



The Hecataeus referred to by Mr. Edmonds was he of Abdera, B.C. 300. 



Stark, Adam [1784 — 1867] : Printer, bookseller, and antiquary. 

 1823. Stonehenge ; 8vo., 30 pp. : Gainsburgh. 



Warton's sonnet is printed on the title-page. 



Stephens, Jno. L. [1805—1852]: Traveller. 

 1843. Incidents of Travel in Yucatan : two vols., 8vo., xii., 

 I' . 459 ; xvi., 478 ; illustrated : London. 



See especially Vol. II., pp. 275 — 313. Describes the ruins of temples at 

 Chichen, etc. Carved figures of colossal serpents occur. 

 VOL. XXXII. — NO. XCVI. K 



