6 Mr. R Bruce Foote on the occurrence of 



bursting of the tank. The Implement- conglomerate as here 

 shown, lies only a couple of hundred yards west of where 

 Implements were discovered in situ. 



The sequence of beds here shown is the following: — 



a. Soil and made ground 6\ 



b. Lateritic conglomerate with layers of quartzite peb- 

 bles 1| — 3\ 



c. Sandy clay with quartzite pebbles and kunkur in 

 strings 5J V — 6J\ 



d. Lateritic conglomerate full of quartzite pebbles 3\ 



e. Grey shales (plant shales) with ferruginous stains 

 V 8 U . 



A few yards to the west of the pagoda a shallow gully 

 exposes these beds as far as the top of lateritic conglome- 

 rate bed " d," and here I found a good hatchet shaped Im- 

 plement sticking out of the overlying sandy clay " c" — a few 

 inches above the junction of the two strata. This Implement 

 was apparently in situ, — about 10 or 11 feet below the true 

 surface. The first Implement found unequivocally in situ, 

 was disinterred by Mr. King from a bed of lateritic con- 

 glomerate exposed to the east of the tank in another deep 

 gully formed by the escape of the surplus water over the 

 kalingula, aided by another bursting of the bund between 

 the kalingula and the pagoda. 



A few yards from the spot where the Implement was 

 found, the vertical left bank is seen to consist of the fol- 

 lowing beds. 



a. Soil 2 X —S\ 



b. Clay with laterite pebbles and a little kunkur 

 3. v 6 XV — 4'. 



c. Pebbly laterite conglomerate 1\ 



d. Kunkurry clay — 7\ 



