Page:The Ancient Stone Implements (1897).djvu/152

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130
POLISHED CELTS.
[CHAP. VI.

have been found about 60 years ago at King's Sutton,[1] Northamptonshire. It has much the appearance of being Carib.

Four greenstone celts of this type, one of them rather crooked laterally, were found in 1869 at Bochym,[2] Cury, Cornwall.

Another of aphanite (111/2 inches) from Cornwall[3] is in the Edinburgh Museum, where is also one of the same material and form (101/2 inches) from Berwickshire,[4] two others of grey porphyritic stone (9 inches) from Aberdeenshire,[5] and another of porphyrite (10 inches) found near Lerwick,[6] Shetland.

I have specimens of the same type from various parts of France. In the Greenwell Collection is a Spanish celt of the same form found near Cadiz.

The bulk of the celts found in Ireland, and formed of other materials than flint, approximate in form to Figs. 69 to 75, though usually rather thinner in their proportion. They range, however, widely in shape, and vary much in their degree of finish.

I now come to the fourth of the subdivisions under which, mainly for the sake of having some basis for classification, I have arranged the polished celts. In it, I have placed those which present any abnormal peculiarities; and the first of these which I shall notice are such as do not materially affect the outline of the celts; as, for instance, the existence of a second cutting edge at the butt-end, at a part where, though the blade is usually tapered away and ground, yet it very rarely happens that it has been left sharp. Indeed, in almost all cases, if in shaping and polishing the celt the butt-end has at one time been sharpened, the edge has been afterwards carefully removed by grinding it away.

The beautifully-formed implement of ochreously-stained flint represented in Fig. 76, was found at Gilmerton, in East Lothian, and is preserved in the National Museum at Edinburgh. The sides are flat with the angles rounded off, and the blade expands slightly at the ends, both of which are sharpened. It is carefully polished all over, so as to show no traces of its having been chipped out, except a slight depression on one face, and this is polished like the rest of the blade. It is upwards of a century since this instrument was turned up by the plough, as described in the Minutes of the Society of Antiquaries of Scotland[7] for April 2, 1782, where it is mentioned as the "head of a hatchet of polished yellow marble, sharpened at both ends."

Another from Shetland[8] (111/2 inches) is made of serpentine and has both ends "formed to a rounded cutting edge."
  1. Proc. Soc. Ant., 2nd S., vol. v. pp. 300, 442.
  2. Arch. Assos. Journ., vol. xxix. p. 343. Cumming's "Churches and Ants. of Cury and Gunwalloe," 1875, p. 66.
  3. Proc. Soc. Ant. Scot., vol. iv. p. 62; xi. p. 514.
  4. P. S. A. S., vol. xi. p. 514.
  5. P. S. A. S., vol. xii. p. 207.
  6. P. S. A. S., vol. xvii. p. 16.
  7. "Acct. of Soc. Ant. of Scot.," 1782, p. 91.
  8. Proc. Soc. Ant. Scot., vol. xvii. p. 15.