Page:The Ancient Stone Implements (1897).djvu/99

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THEIR ABUNDANCE.
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found near Norwich, engraved in the Geologist.[1] I have seen several other specimens from Norfolk, as well as from Wilts, Cambridgeshire, Dorsetshire, and other counties. Some specimens from the neighbourhood of Grime's Graves, Norfolk, have been figured.[2] Flint celts of this class are occasionally found in Yorkshire, but the edge is usually less round in outline than Fig. 23. In some cases it is straight, like Fig. 19. Some of those from Yorkshire are extremely small, as will be seen by Fig. 24, from Scamridge, in the North Riding. I have other specimens, 2 and 21/2 inches long and about 11/2 inches broad, from the Yorkshire Wolds. I have also one of the ordinary form from Lough Neagh, Ireland; but it has been slightly ground near the edge.

Though rare in Ireland, flint celts of this form and character are of common occurrence in France[3] and Belgium. Many such have been

Fig. 25a.—Isle of Wight. 1/2

found at Spiennes, near Mons, where there appears to have been a manufactory, as already mentioned; and I have specimens from Amiens (including one from Montiers, 10 inches), from various parts of Poitou, and from the Seine, at Paris. A broad, thin instrument of this class, made of Silurian schist, and found in the dolmen of Bernac, Charente,[4] is engraved by De Rochebrune.

They occur also in Denmark and Sweden in considerable numbers.

A slightly different and narrower form of implement is shown in Fig. 25, which first appeared in the Archæological Journal, vol. xx., p. 371. The original is of yellow flint, and was found in the Forest of Bere, Hampshire. I may add that I have picked up several in the
  1. Vol. vi., p. iii.
  2. Jour. Eth. Soc., vol. ii., pl. xxviii. 4, 5.
  3. Watelet, "Age de Pierre du Dép. de l'Aisne," &c.
  4. "Restes de l'Ind., &c.," pl. xiii. 1.