2. Tiles of various kinds:—small square tiles, flue-tiles, roof-tiles, &c. Large oblong square tiles for bonding-courses in the walls, &c. Square tiles for making the pillars in the hypocausts.

3. Specimens of the concrete which covered the hypocaust, to the depth of eight inches or more, forming the floor of the apartment.

4. Eight different specimens of the tessellated, or mosaic, pavement, taken up as it was found, and framed.

5. Drawings of the same, made by Mr. George Maw, of Broseley, and presented by that gentleman to the Museum.

6. Sculpture in sandstone; a head of late Roman art, which appears to have formed part of the architectural ornamentation of a building.

7. Bases, capitals, and shafts of columns.

8. Stucco, covering the walls, coloured, plain, and with some formal patterns. One specimen, bearing the letters A. R. C. A., having formed part of an inscription on the wall. Tessellated ornamentation of the surface of a wall, dark and light tesseræ, so as to form an irregular pattern.

9. Umbilicus, or hinge for a door.

10. Iron bolts,