Page:The Ancient Stone Implements (1897).djvu/411

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LOCALITIES WHERE FOUND.
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Hastings;[1] one like Fig. 307, found near urns, scrapers, &c., at Wavertree, near Liverpool;[2] some like Fig. 307, with ashes, at Carno,[3] Montgomeryshire; and several others from barrows in Wilts,[4] Dorsetshire, and Derbyshire. A considerable number of flint arrow-heads are engraved in a plate in the Transactions of the Historical Society of Lancashire and Cheshire.[5] They are, however, for the most part forgeries. Others from East Lancashire[6] and Rochdale[7] have been described. Besides the discoveries recorded by Hoare and Bateman, and those made in Yorkshire,[8] such arrow-heads are mentioned as having been found in the Thames;[9] in the cemetery at Standlake,[10] Oxon; in West Surrey,[11] from which a number of arrow-heads of various forms have been figured by Mr. F. Lasham; St. Leonard's Forest,[12] Horsham; Plymouth,[13] on Dartmoor,[14] Devonshire; at Horndean,[15] Hants; and in large numbers in Derbyshire, especially on Middleton Moor.[16] Both the leaf-shaped and the barbed forms have been found near Leicester.[17] A number have been found at Carn Brê,[18] Cornwall.

Arrow-heads, of which the form is not specified, have been found at Wangford,[19] Suffolk; Cliffe,[20] near Carlebury, on the Yorkshire side of the Tees; Priddy,[21] Somerset; Sutton Courtney,[22] Berks; Lingfield Mark Camp,[23] Surrey; near Ramsgate;[24] Bigberry Hill,[25] near Canterbury; Manton,[26] Lincolnshire; Anstie Camp[27] and Chart Park, Dorking.

Besides specimens already cited, and many from the Yorkshire Wolds and Moors, there are in my collection stemmed and barbed arrow-heads from the following localities:—One much like Fig. 307, from Staunton, near Ixworth, Suffolk; many others from West Stow, Lakenheath, and Icklingham, in the same county; from Hunsdon, near Ware, Brassington, Derbyshire, and Turkdean, Gloucestershire, much like Fig. 308; one from Abingdon, like Fig. 327; and one from St. Agnes, Truro, of the same form as Fig. 317, but not so delicately worked; and others from Wicken and Reach Fens, Cambs. I have also
  1. Suss. Arch. Coll., vol. xiii. p. 309.
  2. Tr. Hist. Soc. Lanc. and Chesh., N. S., vol. viii. p. 131.
  3. Arch. Camb., 3rd. S., vol. iii. p. 303.
  4. Hoare's "South. Wilts," the "Barrow Diggers," Bateman's "Vestiges," Arch., vol. xxx. p. 333; vol. xliii. pp. 418, 420; vol. lii. pp. 48, 53, 61. Wilts Arch. Mag., vol. vi. p. 319.
  5. Vol. xiv. pl. iii.
  6. Tr. Lanc. and Chesh. Arch. Soc., vol. ii. pl. i. Trans. Manch. Geol. Soc., vol. xiii. p. 141; xiv. p. 284.
  7. Op. cit., viii. p. 127. Trans. Manch. Geol. Soc., vol. xvi. p. 287.
  8. For Yorkshire arrow-heads see Yorhsh. Arch. and Top. Journ., vol. i. (1870), p. 4.
  9. Proc Soc. Ant., 2nd S., vol. i. p. 64.
  10. Arch., vol. xxxvii. 369.
  11. Suss. Arch. Coll., vol. xxvii. p. 177.
  12. Surr. Arch. Coll., vol. xi.
  13. Tr. Dev. Assoc., vol. xx. p. 44.
  14. Op. cit., xxvi. p. 53.
  15. Arch. Journ., vol. xx. p. 372.
  16. Bateman's "Cat.," 47, et seqq. See also the York, Norwich, and Lincoln Volumes of the Arch. Inst.
  17. Harrison's "Geol. of Leic. and Rutl.," p. 49.
  18. Rel. and Ill. Archæol., vol. ii. p. 45. Journ. Roy. Inst. of Cornw. vol. xiii. p. 92.
  19. Arch. Journ., vol. x. p. 354.
  20. Op. cit., vol. xiv. p. 79.
  21. Op. cit., vol. xvi. p. 151.
  22. Arch. Assoc. Journ., vol. i. p. 309.
  23. "Trans. Arch. Assoc. at Glouc.," p. 94.
  24. A. A. J., vol. iv. p. 152.
  25. Op. cit., vol. xviii. p. 272.
  26. Op. cit., vol. iv., p. 396.
  27. Arch., vol. ix. p. 100.