354 JOURNAL OF THE PLYMOUTH INSTITUTION. 
foot-level of Cave-earth, beneath the continuous Stalagmite Floor 
13 inches thick, in ‘‘ The Vestibule,’ upwards of 30 feet from the 
northern entrance, November 17th, 1866. 
Fig. 4 (No. 3869, Cav. Journ., and Fig. 391, Evans,) gives 
views, on the scale of one-half, linear, of . 
aremarkably elegant instrument, made from 
a ridged or carinated flake, but having three 
facets at the but-end and a little secondary 
working on one side. At the but-end the 
outer face of the flake, not of the nodule, 
has been left in its original condition; whilst 
the inner face, as shown in the figure, has 
had the original surface of the flake almost 
entirely removed by secondary working, and 
the edges have again been retouched so as 
to make them even and sharp. The but- 
end is chisel-like in form. It is of a sort - 
of piebald flint, being partly of a white and 
elsewhere of a drab colour; and was found 
in the second foot-level of Cave-earth, be- 


neath the continuous floor of Stalagmite 
which was 32 inches thick, in the ‘‘ South a 
west Chamber,”’ upwards of 130 feet from the nearest external 
entrance, in my presence, July 4th, 1868. There were a few bones 
lying with it, and immediately below were 13 molar teeth of horse, 
a canine tooth of hyzena, and a gnawed bone. 
The specimens artificially wrought in bone are seven in number, 
of which five only are figured in this paper. The figures are all 
of full size. 
Fig. 5 (No. 1835, Cav. Journ., and Fig. 407, Evans,) is that of 
dre 
























































































a bone awl, sharply pointed at one end. It was found, with several 
bones and five flint chips, in the Black Band, about 40 feet from 
