684 
Proceedings of the Pioycd Society 
Mh, There is another group of stones , five or six in number, on 
Hatton Hill , about 500 yards to the east of the bill top, and about 
20 feet below its level. Each of these stones is on average about 
a cubic yard in solid content, and weighs about two tons. 
Hatton Hill is at its top about 900 feet above the sea. The farm 
of G-lenballoch, on which most of the other stones are, is about 750 
feet above the sea. 
To revert now to the stone first mentioned, the annexed wood- 
cut will give an idea of its shape. The cups or cavities on its 
sides—-which, however, are not well shown on the diagram—are 
from 2 to 3 inches in diameter, and from half an inch to one inch 
deep. The grooves are about half an inch deep and about half 
an inch wide. 
The cup-shaped cavities w r ere first noticed about fourteen or 
fifteen years ago, by the Rev. Mr Herdman, and were shown by him 
_ « 
to Hr Wise, a well-known archaeologist. At that time the part of 
the stone above the surface of the ground measured about 9^ feet 
