[49b] Munro, pp. 138, 139.

[51a] Proceedings Scot. Soc. Ant. vol. xxxiv. p. 462.

[51b] Munro, p. 147.

[52a] Proc. Soc. Ant. Scot. 1900-1901, p. 296.

[52b] Munro, p. 138.

[52c] These structures, of course, were of dry stone, without lime and mortar. By what name we call them, “towers,” or “cairns,” is indifferent to me.

[54] Beda, book 1, chap. i.

[61] Proceedings Soc. Scot. Ant. 1899-1900, vol. xxxiv. pp. 456-458.

[63] See Prof. Zimmer’s Das Mutterrecht der Pickten, Rhys’s Celtic Britain, Rhind Lectures, and in Royal Commission’s Report on Wales, with my History of Scotland, vol. i. pp. 12, 14.

[64a] Bureau of Ethnology’s Report, 1896-97, p. 324. See also the essay on “Indian Pictographs,” Report of Bureau, for 1888-89.