466 
refer to this village again further on. They afterwards 
migrated to the interior, and remains of their villages are- 
traceable on the hills and moors. 
Amongst the number of settlements which exist, I notice 
some in particular which require special investigation, because 
they all differ materially, and seem to have belonged to 
distinct peoples or tribes. In Cleveland, on Danby Moor, 
Dr. Young described two parallel lines of pits, like a street, 
which were enclosed by an embankment, with a stream 
running through the centre, and at the west end a circular 
walled space of 35 feet in diameter, with remains of a stone 
circle or cromlech, and to the north several high stones, and 
to the south three large tiunuli 100 feet apart, and to the 
east of these a large tumulus with a fossae round it above the 
base. This unique relic of another age has yielded some 
important evidence, and is capable of supplying us with an 
entire history of its people, if examined and described as a 
whole; but if parts are removed without being carefully 
recorded, then so many pages are torn from its volume. 
Another village at Skip with is totally distinct in character. 
There the remains of huts, slightly raised above the level of 
the land, exist, which indicate a different method of keeping 
them dry. They are enclosed by a double line of embank- 
ment, with ditches, while the tumuli are surrounded by 
fossoe of a square form. The members of the Yorkshire 
Antiquarian Club found these barren of relics ; but still they 
illustrate a settlement of distinct people, and form an im- 
portant link of pre-historic knowledge. The flint implements 
which belong to them have not been identified. 
The third form of foundations for huts, indicating a 
different people, exists at Ingleborough, where stone walls 
were built to support a roof. There are, no doubt, various 
flint implements to be found on all these sites which would 
identify the people with the relics that have been taken from 
