Page:The Ancient Stone Implements (1897).djvu/223

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A LARGE FORM COMMON IN THE NORTH.
201

properly speaking, an axe-hammer. This specimen was found near Red Dial, Wigton, Cumberland, and is in my own collection. The two sides are nearly flat and parallel, and the edge appears to have been re-sharpened since the axe-head was first formed, as it is ground away to a shoulder a little below where it is perforated. It is formed

Fig. 131.—Wigton. 1/2

of an igneous rock. A very symmetrical example, 81/2 inches long, with the sides nearly flat, from Aikbrae, Culter, Lanarkshire, is engraved in the Journal of the Archæological Association.[1]

A very similar specimen, 11 inches long, found in a turf moss near Haversham, Westmorland, is engraved in the Archæologia,[2] as is
  1. Vol. xvii. p. 20.
  2. Vol. ii. p. 125.