1920-21.] Obituary Notices. 167 
the request of the Council to the Royal Society of Edin- 
burgh, 4th March 1895), Edin. Roy. Soc. Proc., vol. xx, 
pp. 385-411. 
1896. Report to the Society of Antiquaries of London as Local Secretary 
for Scotland, Proceedings , vol. xvi, pp. 178-197 (2nd series). 
This communication includes brief descriptions of (1) A Crannog 
in Lochan Dughaill ; (2) A Cave at Oban containing Human 
Remains and Implements ; (3) The excavation of the Roman 
Camp at Birrens. 
1897. “ On Intermediary Links between Man and the Lower Animals ” 
(published in abstract, but in full in Prehistoric Problems ), 
Edin. Roy. Soc. Proc., vol. xxi, pp. 249-250. 
1898. “ The Relation between Archaeology, Chronology, and Land Oscilla- 
tions in Post-Glacial Times ” (being the opening address to the 
Antiquarian Section at the Lancaster meeting of the Roy. 
Arch. Institute), Arch. Jour., vol. lv, pp. 259-285. 
“ Notes on Prehistoric Trepanning in the Old and New Worlds,” 
Proc. Soc. Antiq. Scot., vol. xxxii, pp. 220-235. 
1899. “Notes on a Crannog at Hyndford, near Lanark,” Proc. Soc. Antiq. 
Scot., voL xxxiii, pp. 373-387. 
Controversy as to the genuineness of certain manufactured objects 
found in the debris of ancient inhabited sites at Dumbuck and 
Dunbuie in the Clyde basin. Dr Munro’s statement questioning 
their authenticity appeared in the Glasgow Herald, 7th January 
1899. (Subsequent correspondence followed in the same journal 
and in other journals). 
1901. “Notice of an Ancient Kitchen-Midden near Largo Bay, Fifeshire,” 
Proc. Soc. Antiq. Scot., vol. xxxv, pp. 281-300. 
“Is the Dumbuck Crannog Neolithic?” Reliquary and Illus. 
Archceologist, vol. vii, pp. 107-119. 
Report to the Society of Antiquaries of London as Local Secretary 
for Scotland, Proceedings, vol. xviii, pp. 370-386. This 
communication includes the following notices : (1) Isolated 
Finds; (2) The Roman Camp at Ardoch ; (3) The Hill-Fort 
near Abernethy ; (4) A Romano-British Crannog at Hyndford ; 
(5) The Hill-Fort of Dunbuie and its remarkable remains; 
(6) The Dumbuck “ Crannog.” 
“ Prehistoric Kitchen-Middens and what they teach us,” Trans. Scot. 
Eat. Hist. Soc., 7th November 1901. 
1902. “ On the Prehistoric Horses of Europe and their supposed 
