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larger number of the encircling stones have the appearance 
of baying been laid flat, one on the other, in the form of a 
wall. The stones are generally small (two to three feet in 
length), and the greatest diameter of the area, which is of 
irregular shape, is about thirty feet. The monument is 
called in the ordnance map “Druidical circle. 3 ’ 
A second structure, resembling the former, marked on the 
map as “ site of a tumulus , 33 is at a few yards 3 distance south 
of the shooting-house on Burley Moor. Here more of the 
stones are set on edge, and outside of them is a bank of earth 
and stones, about five feet wide, against which they rest. 
A third monument, described by Mr. W ardell, is at a 
distance of two-thirds of a mile west from this shooting- 
house ; and is a small circle as compared with those I have 
described as existing in Brittany, the diameter being about 
forty-seven feet, and the highest stone three feet three inches 
above the ground. This structure is of a different character 
from the other two, and was probably destined to serve the 
same purposes, whatever they were, as those in Brittany. I 
should be inclined to look upon the two other circular 
inclosures as being the remains of dwellings, i.e. } of hut- 
circles. 
ON THE BRIDLINGTON FLINT IMPLEMENTS. BY JOHN FFOOKS, 
ESQ. 
In a Paper which I read before your Society in 1866, I 
described the discovery which I had made at Bridlington, 
that there are four distinct classes of flint implements in that 
immediate neighbourhood. I have this year collected more 
implements, that had been thrown up by recent ploughings 
on the same fields, and I am glad to find that they confirm 
my previous conclusions in every particular ; and they have 
explained to me very important points relating to the mode 
of warfare in those early days, as well as illustrated the social 
