[311] Proc. Soc. Ant. Scot., xxxvii, 1903, pp. 370-415.
[312] A chambered mound in Stromness, Orkney, which was not a sepulchre but a dwelling, has also been recently excavated, and contained a stone implement (Proc. Soc. Ant. Scot., xxxvii, 1903, pp. 352-9). Mr. Christison (ib., xxxviii, 1904, pp. 5-6) tentatively refers it to the Neolithic Age, while the discoverer more cautiously says that it must have been built in ‘a remote period, not ... because the implement is made of stone, but because the type is an ancient one’.
[313] Mr. George Clinch. See his article in Surrey Archaeol. Collections, xvii, 1902, pp. 181-3.
[314] Matériaux pour l’hist. ... de l’homme, 3e sér., ii, 1885, pp. 1-18.
[315] R. Munro, The Lake-Dwellings of Europe, 1890, pp. 470-1, 489. Cf. Journ. Roy. Soc. Ant. Ireland, 5th ser., x, 1900 (1901), pp. 208, 235, and Guide to the Ant. of the Bronze Age (Brit. Museum), pp. 142-3. See p. 154, infra.
[316] Mem. Anthr. Soc., iii, 1870, p. 76; W. Greenwell, Brit. Barrows, 1877, p. 742.
[317] Journ. Brit. Archaeol. Ass., N. S., v, 1899, p. 285.
[318] W. Greenwell, Brit. Barrows, p. 742.
[319] Journ. Ethn. Soc., ii, 1870, p. 431.
[320] W. Greenwell, Brit. Barrows, pp. 740-1. Cf. p. 151, infra.