57 
upon Tablet 12 h and c, are wax models of flint saws (?) from 
Bodio station, Lake Varese. 
Upon Tablet 10 is the wax model of an amulet (?) of 
micaceous quartzite, in the form of a ring, from Bodio station. 
Upon Tablet 11 a, c, d, and f, and Tablet 1 2 a are wax models 
of barbed flint arrow-heads, from Bodio station. 
Upon Tablet 12 d and e are two stemmed and barbed flint 
arrow-heads, from Isolino station. Lake Varese, presented to 
the Collection by Mr. J. W. Flower, F.G.S., who has also given 
many of the casts from the lake- dwellings of Lake Varese. 
Upon Tablet 11 b is the wax model of a flint spear-head, from 
the pile-dwellings of Isola Camilla, Lake Varese. 
Upon Tablet 1 1 ^ is the wax model of a leaf-shaped flint 
arrow-head, also from Isola Camilla. 
Upon Tablets 17 to 21 are casts of spindlewhorls " of 
stone and terra-cotta from Bodio and Keller stations. 17 a only 
shows the commencement of drilling. 
The originals of nearly all the casts exhibited from Italy are 
preserved in the Museum at Milan. 
A 34 AND A 35. 
Flint Implements from Belgium. 
The worked flints exhibited in these Cases were found, 
together with many similar specimens, on the rising ground to 
the south-east of Mons, between Spiennes, Nouvelles, and Har- 
mignies ; they are most abundant on the lands to the south and 
south-west of Spiennes. This series formed part of the Toil- 
liez Collection. M. Desire Toilliez announced the discovery 
of flint implements near Spiennes to the Academy of Sciences 
of Belgium in 1847. After the death of M. Toilliez, in 1865, his 
prehistoric collection passed into the hands of Mr. John Evans, 
F.R.S., who has presented specimens of the Spiennes implements 
to several public Collections, including the Blackmore Museum. 
In 1866, M. C. Malaise attempted to assign these objects to the 
Quaternary period, and M. Le Hon, in ''L'Homme fossile," fell 
into the same error. Mr. Evans and the late M. Toilliez shared 
the idea that a manufactory of flint implements had existed 
near Spiennes, and that the specimens found there are the 
rejected implements and waste pieces. In this opinion 
MM. Gabriel de Mortillet, Cornet, A. Briart, and d'Omalius 
coincide. 
Flint implements, bearing a considerable resemblance to 
