1893 - 94 .] Dr Munro on Bise and Progress of Anthropology. 237 
with so much accuracy as the first named. Associated with these 
skeletons, ^.e., on the same stratum, were worked flints of the type 
known as Mousterien, and some animal remains representing the 
folloAving fauna : — 
Ehinoceros tichorhinus (abondant). 
Equus caballus (tr^s abondant). 
Cervus elaphus (rare). 
Cervus tarandus (tres rare). 
Bos primigenius (assez abondant). 
Elephas primigenius (abondant). 
Ursus spelseus (rare). 
Meles taxus (rare). 
Hyena spelsea (abondante). 
{Congres Internationa^ ^c., Paris., 1889, p. 322.) 
Immediately above the skeletons was a hardened layer composed of 
chippings of ivory and flint, pieces of charcoal, and some angular 
stones of the surrounding limestone rock. Above this there was a 
reddish deposit containing the remains of the same fauna, but the 
worked objects indicated a decided advance in civilisation — awls 
and borers of flint j needles, beads, and ornaments of bone and 
ivory. Over this came a bed of yellowish clay, in which were still 
found bones of the mammoth as well as flint implements. And, 
finally, there was a mass of clay and fallen rocks, without relics of 
any kind (see section). 
The possibility of these bodies being brought here and buried in 
