I? 
on bone and stone, see cast, Case B 13, tablets 4 and 5 ; bone 
needles ; barbed spear or harpoon heads, &c.. Case B 13, tablets 
I and 3 ; and portions of haematite which have probably served 
for paint, Case B 13, tablet 8. 
From the rock-shelter at La Madelaine the following objects 
have been obtained in greater abundance than at Les Eyzies : — 
worked bones. Case B 15, tablets 21 and 22, C 12, tablet 11 ; 
harpoon heads, Case B 15, tablets i to 8, C 12, tablets i and 2, 
some of which are casts; sculptured bones, Case B 15, tablets 9 to 
16 and 23 and 24, Case C 12, tablets 3 to 9, some of which are 
casts; Case C 12, tablet 10, is the cast of a portion of a mam- 
moth's tusk, upon which is engraved the outline of that animal ; 
a stone mortar is exhibited in Case C 10, No. 9. The animal 
remains at La Madelaine present no difference as to species from 
those found at Les Eyzies. The objects found in the cave at 
Massat (Ariege), Case B 11, tablets 4 and 5, are classed with 
those from Les Eyzies and La Madelaine. 
4. Laugerie Haute. — This station on the right bank of the 
Vezere is a rock-shelter, and has produced various remains, 
including a number of delicately chipped flint lance-heads, 
some of them closely resembling in type the flint spear- 
heads of Denmark and England, Case B 12, tablet 7 ; drills 
. of flint. Case B 12, tablet 8. Arrow-heads and harpoon 
heads of bone are rare at this station, although at Laugerie 
Basse, near by, they are abundant. Case B 12, tablets 11 
and 12, Case C 11, tablet 3. Casts of sculptured bone 
from Laugerie Basse are exhibited, Case B 12, tablets 9 
and 10, C 10, tablets 5 and 6, C 11, tablets i, 2, 4, and 5 ; 
and bone needles with drilled eyes, Case B 12 tablet 13. 
B 14. 
Upon tablets i to 17 are flint flakes and scrapers from the cave 
of Chaffaud (Vienne), France. 
B 16 
contains a series of worked bone objects, flint flakes, &c., 
from the cave of La Vache, Alliat (Ariege). Upon tablet 12 
are some bone needles, with drilled eyes, from this cave. 
Scrapers. 
The large number of flint scrapers found in the caves of the 
Dordogne will have struck the observer. The broad flint scrapers 
from Le Moustier resemble those found in the drift ; whilst the 
Greenland Esquimaux still employ a tool of very similar form. 
At the other stations in Dordogne, however, the flint scrapers 
are of a different type — see Case B 13, tablets 9 to 16 ; these 
