Our Gilbert White Page 



105 



Harvey's " British Marine Algae," 1849, out of print, 21s. 



" British Seaweeds," by Samuel Gray, 1867, 16 coloured 

 plates, 5s. to 7s. 6d. An attempt to combine the popular and 

 scientific. 



Landsborough's " Popular History of British Seaweeds," 

 Second Edition, 1851, 20 coloured plates, 5s. 6d. 



" Revised List of British Marine Algae," by E. M. Holmes 

 and E. A. L. Batters, Henry Frowde, 1892, 2s. 6d. A hand 

 list only, but indispensable to the serious student. 



" An Introduction to the Study of Seaweeds," by George 

 Murray. Macmillan Co., 1895, 7 s - 6d. The best general 

 account of the group. 



OUR GILBERT WHITE PAGE. 

 Prehistoric Haslemere. 



On the evening of Thursday, June 21, a paper — the 

 joint production of the Editors of the present Journal — was 

 read before the Royal Society of Antiquaries on the dis- 

 coveries which have been recently made concerning the pre- 

 Roman inhabitants of this part of England. 



It was divided into two parts, one dealt with the flint 

 implements and weapons of neolithic times ; the other detailed 

 the discovery of an urn field or cemetery of the late Keltic 

 period. Many examples of barbed arrow-heads of flint, and 

 Keltic pottery were exhibited. 



Reference was made to the Blackdown flint factory, and 

 the large series of flint and other stone weapons 1 which had 

 been found there by Mr. Allen Chandler, J. P. 



1 Some curious perforated circular hammer stones, and rubbing stones 

 from this spot, also a remarkable ironstone implement from the railway 

 cutting, have been figured and described in the Trans. S. E. Union 

 Scientific Socs., 1 904-5. 



