An introduction to the study of prehistoric art . ?==S^ ,-.^==T- -== ==~;j^i^ ^^^ -=0^^ \ ^...Bpsrrr tt-^^ =a>,^/^ tKtU S* JpiyTO??ryTT;BVViii Il ^iiii,,i,i,i,a»^ V. y. ?«XSi /X7J 3-7^X4 Fig. 313.—Pottery irom Glastonbury Lake Village.(From a photograph by Dr. A. BuUeid.) tention, for it displays unmistakably characteristic LateKeltic curvilinear designs, and thus affords a further proofof the period to which this settlement must be attributed(Fig. 313). further use of clay is seen in llie thousands ofunbaked pellets for slings, and in terra-cotta triangularbodies, presumably loom weight
An introduction to the study of prehistoric art . ?==S^ ,-.^==T- -== ==~;j^i^ ^^^ -=0^^ \ ^...Bpsrrr tt-^^ =a>,^/^ tKtU S* JpiyTO??ryTT;BVViii Il ^iiii,,i,i,i,a»^ V. y. ?«XSi /X7J 3-7^X4 Fig. 313.—Pottery irom Glastonbury Lake Village.(From a photograph by Dr. A. BuUeid.) tention, for it displays unmistakably characteristic LateKeltic curvilinear designs, and thus affords a further proofof the period to which this settlement must be attributed(Fig. 313). further use of clay is seen in llie thousands ofunbaked pellets for slings, and in terra-cotta triangularbodies, presumably loom weights. 1 British Lake Village, near Glastonbury, by Bulleid and others(1904). Glastonbury Lake Village, by A. Bulleid and H. St. G. Gray LATE KELTIC POTTERY 319 Evidence of Late Keltic decoration of wooden articleswas, from the nature of the material, hardly to be specimens have been recovered from thisLake Villasfe. Part of a tub cut out of the solid, about6 inches high and 12 in diameter, is ornamented witha bold and graceful engraved curvilinear design, consistingof returning spirals with trumpet terminals. The shadingis made by cross hatchin
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Keywords: ., bookcentury1900, bookdecade1910, bookidintroduction, bookyear1915