551 
paniments of the urn interments in the Roman cemeteries 
he opened in Normandy, pieces of chipped flint, generally 
formed into the shape of wedges, which would of course 
hardly differ in shape from what we are accustomed to call 
flint axes. Of the two urns, of which Mr. Tindall has sent 
me drawings from which the accompanying cuts were made, 
Fig. 4. Supposed Roman Urn. 
one (Fig. 4) I consider to be Roman, that is, belonging 
to the Roman period ; the other (fig. 5) belongs to those 
ruder forms which are common in the Yorkshire barrows, and 
which are generally called, without any positive reason, British. 
Fig. 5. Sepulchral Urn. 
