This page needs to be proofread.
462
NATURE
[March 3, 1870

A^.4

462

TURE

and beautifully-chipped leaf-shaped arrow-heads" have been found in one or two instances, and this type of arrow-head, which is unbarbcd, is the only one yet disIn no case has any trace of metal been found covered. with the primary interments. Fragments of a coarse black pottery are occasionally met with, and in one barrow, that of Nortoii Bavant, Dr. Thurnam was fortunate enough to discover a tolerably perfect vessel of extremely rude construction, and utterly devoid of the ornamentation usually found in the pottery from the round barrows. Thanks to the courtesy of the .Society of Antiquaries, we are enabled to reproduce Dr. Thurnam's drawmg of this vessel. We are likewise indebted to the same Society for the other figures which illustrate this paper. Remains of oxen of the ancient small species. Bos loiigifrons or Eos brac/iycavs, are often found in long barrows not far from the human remains antlers and bones of the red deer are still more frequent. Tusks and bones of swine have also been discovered. It would appear that oxen were slaughtered at the funeral feasts, and that the heads and feet i^the bones of which parts are more frecjuently found), not being used for food, were buried in the barrow, perhaps as offerings to the gods or to the spirits of the dead. Secondary interments in the upper portion of long barrows are not infrequent, and aftord valuable evidence .Some of these interof the antiquity of these tumuli. ments arc assigned without hesitation to the Anglo-Saxon period others, again, undoubtedly belong to the Ancient Britons of the bronze age, being sometimes burials after cremation, sometimes inttrments of entire skeletons in the contracted posture characteristic of the round barIn the latter case the remains are frequently rows. associated with pottery undoubtedly of the round-barrow In order to show the difference between this period. pottery found with secondary interments in long barrows, and part of the long-barrow period itself, we reproduce (Fig. 3) an elegantly ornamented drinking-cup found at Figheldean, and now in possession of Dr. Thurnam. In the present article we have only touched upon some It of the most interesting of Dr. Thurnam's researches. still remains for us to notice the chambered long barrows, and the most important evidence of all, that derived from the skeletons disinterred in both chambered and unhave been able from the archa;ochambered barrows. logical evidence to gain some idea of the state of barbabut still rism in which these primitive people lived further information is to be obtained even on this point from the very bones of the people themselves and from these sad relics alone can we obtain any ray of light as to the relation of these most ancient Britons to the population of more civilised times.

We

_jVa;r/i 3,

1S70

the short-sighted or the far-sighted person each forms his own estimate of the moon's real size, tlic position of the moon affects the judgment, nay, even the state of tiie weather influences our instinctive estimate. But it is interesting to consider what is really implied by such a statement as that the moon is a foot in diameter. This is a size often assigned to the moon, 1 may remark, though many judge her to look larger. The moon subtends an angle of about half a degree, so that this estimate makes half a degree of the celestial sphere one foot in length. Thus the circumference becomes about 720 feet, and the radius about 115 feet. This, at any rate, is the distance which the estimate assigns to the moon. And this last view is the more correct, since the varying estimates made of the moon's dimensions according to her position, suffice to show that the mind instinctively assigns to the celestial vault a somewhat flattened figure, the part In fact, a common overhead seeming nearest to us. opinion that the moon's diameter looks about twice as large when she is on the horizon as Vv'hen she is nearly overhead, would assign to the celestial dome the figure of a segment of a sphere, less than a fifth of the sphere's surface being above the horizon. It is worth noticing, though Pvl. Viguier does not consider the point, that we can conclude from the estimated size of the moon as coiiipaicd loit'i tlic intervals separating certain stars, that the mind intuitively assigns to the moon a distance considerably greater than that of the fixed stars. For example, I find that if, when the moon is below the horizon, an observer be ashed whether the distance separating the three stars in Orion's beit (f from f, or e from 0, I mean) be greater or less than the moon's diameter, the answer is that it is about equal to that dimension. In reality, the moon's apparent diaineter is but about one-third of the distance between these stars. It follows that the mind estimates the distance between the stars on a scale one-third only even of the small scale according to which it measures the moon; in other words, that it regards the distance of the fixed stars as about one-third that of the moon. It may be, however, that the resiflt of this comparison merely indicates that the mind assigns to the celestial sphere as seen on a moonless night a distance equal to only one-third of that which separates us from the faintly seen stars of a night on which the moon is full.

RiCHD. A. Proctor

AZOTES

HO]V LARGE SEEMS THE MOON? a communication addressed to IN Scientitique, M. Viguier remarks

the Association on the linear dimensions which ordinary observers employ to define the size of celestial objects. They seem to imagine that they are really pointing out the size of a meteor, for instance, when they state that it was a yard in diameter, or the like Of course, such a statement is absolutely without meaning while the seemingly less precise mode to the astronomer of speaking which compares the size of a meteor to that of the moon, is in reality much more valuable. It is true that when an observer says a meteor was as large as the moon, he makes a wider error than when he says it was a yard in diameter but the astronomer knows v.'hat one statement means, whereas he can form no real estimate even of the meteor's apparent size from the other. If every observer formed the same estimate of the linear dimensions of a celestial object, one might indeed interpret a statement of the linear dimensions of a meteor. But this is not the case. As IVI. Viguier justly remarks,

We

are informed that her M.ijesty's

Government has

deter-

Royal Commission to inquiic into the present This step will be hailed with the state of Science in England. liveliest satisfaction on all sides, and much good will certainly follow from such an inquiry, especially at a time when the arrangements for the prosecution of Science in this country are acknowledged on all hands not only to be "chaotic," but posi-

mined

to issue a

tively detrimental to the national interest.

We

learn that

some

of the commissioners have already been designated, but as their

number

is

not yet complete,

we withhold

the names.

We have been favoured with a copy of the report just issued by the Rivers Pollution Commissioners on the Mersey and Ribble basins. We hope to return to this subject shortly. The

first

Royal Society's Soiree of

this

Session will

t.ike

place on Saturday evening next.

Mr.

E.

Ray Lankester

has been elected by examination to

the Radcliffe Travelling Fellowship at Oxford.

^VE have received the third part of Vol. I. of the Transactions tile Edinburgh Geological Society, containing the communications made to that body during its session 186S-1S69. These are numerous, and testify to the activity of the members of the of