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heap being removed to help to build that Bridge, they 
were difcover’d. 
There were the like Urns found near Omagh in the 
County of Tyrone , in the like Chefts, under two heaps 
of Stones, which were removed to build fotne Houfes 
in the faid Town. 
There was one Urn found in a little Tandy Hill near 
Cookjion on the Road to l ijfon in the County of Tyrone : 
It was covered with a great rude Lime-Stone $ which 
being removed in order to made Lime, the Urn was 
'difcovered in a Hole encompafs’d with fix Stones of 
equal bignefs, which made a Hexagon, in which the 
Urn hood. The Water that had fallen on the Urn from 
the Lime-Stone, or the Air condensing, had petrify’d, 
and made a Stony cruft on the outfide thereof. There 
were r ome Bones and Afhes found in it. Sir Robert Starlet 
had the Urn and gave it to me, which I defigned for 
the College $ but the Fellow I intruded to carry it broke 
the fame, and fo my defign fail’d. 
At Dungannon in the fame County, a Servant of mine 
working in a Sand-fit near the Town, ftruck on an Urn, 
which was the largeft I ever (aw. It was found with 
the Mouth whelm’d downward, the Bones and Afhes on 
a flat Stone, and the Urn covering them : It would have 
held about three Quarts, and had been better burnt in 
the Fire than they ufually are : But this met with the 
fate of others $ it was broke by the Spade before the 
Man was aware, and had no Stones about it as the others, 
but was bury’d in the Earth about a Foot under Ground. 
As they dug the Bank for Sand, the Place where the 
Carcafs was burnt was difcovered by the Coals and 
pieces of Bones, which fpread a great way, about a foot 
under Ground. 
Near to the fame Town, on Mr. FCnox’s Eftate, in a 
Town-land call'd Killimeille (which in Englijh is Low- 
fly Cell, or Lowfey Burying-Place) there are on the 
top 
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