10 
portion of the harness of the horses, and measure respectively 
f of an inch and i inch in diameter. The larger one has a 
small hole through the centre, and on the convex side is a 
faintly-engraved representation of a wheel with four spokes. 
No. 12 is a crooked piece of iron, which bears the impression 
of the wood once attached to it. It is 3! inches long and \ of 
an inch thick, with one end flattened and broadened. 
Nos. 14 and 17 are the iron hoops for the naves, 5 inches in 
diameter inside, § of an inch wide, and nearly \ of an inch in 
thickness. 
Nos. 15 and 16 are the iron hoops of the wheels. One 
measures 2 feet 6 f inches in diameter, if inches in width, and 
about of an inch in thickness. It is remarkable that the 
other wheel measures only 2 feet inches in diameter, if 
inches in width, and yy- of an inch in thickness. This differ¬ 
ence of ij inches in diameter of the two wheels would seem to 
suggest that originally they were not a pair. 
J. R. Mortimer. 
PRINTED BY COUETAS AND VOLANS, KING-ST., YORK. 
