[613] See Guide to the Ant. of the Bronze Age (Brit. Museum), pp. 52-3; and p. 467, infra.
[614] D. Wilson, Prehist. Annals of Scotland, 2nd ed., i, 1863, p. 107.
[615] See p. 87, supra.
[616] See B. C. A. Windle, Remains of the Prehist. Age, &c., p. 279.
[617] Anc. Bronze Implements, p. 486. Bronze spear-heads were associated with objects of the Early Iron Age in a hoard found on Hagbourne Hill in Berkshire, which belonged to a period of transition. See p. 267, infra.
[618] Guide to the Ant. of the Bronze Age (Brit. Museum), p. 143. The argument is no doubt generally sound, and no find, as far as I know, refutes it; but I do not think that it is absolutely conclusive. Stone implements were undoubtedly used in the Early Iron Age; and bronze and iron implements have been found together.
[619] Archaeol. Journal, xxiv, 1867, pp. 229-35; xxvi, 1869, pp. 301-5, 317; xxvii, 1870, pp. 158-9. The workshops may have been used in the Bronze Age; but one, in which iron slag was found, contained Roman coins. Huts similar to those of Ty Mawr have been explored in Brittany (ib., p. 148).
[620] Archaeologia, xlv, 1880, pp. 356-8. See p. 86, supra.
[621] W. C. Lukis, Prehist. Stone Monuments of the Brit. Isles,—Cornwall, pp. 18-9.
[622] W. Greenwell, Brit. Barrows, p. 402; Reliquary, viii, 1902, p. 92.