. The ancient stone implements, weapons, and ornaments, of Great Britain. Fig. 328.—Icklingham. Fig. 329.—Langdale End. Fig. 330.—Amotherby. A beautiful specimen of another double-barbed triangular form isshown in Fig. 329. It was found at Langdale End, on the Moors ofthe North Riding of Yorkshire, and is in the collection of the Rev. , It has been surface-chipped over part of one face,but on the other it still shows the central ridge of the flake fromwhich it was made. The sides are neatly serrated. Fig. 330 represents a broader and less distinctly barbed form. Theoriginal w


. The ancient stone implements, weapons, and ornaments, of Great Britain. Fig. 328.—Icklingham. Fig. 329.—Langdale End. Fig. 330.—Amotherby. A beautiful specimen of another double-barbed triangular form isshown in Fig. 329. It was found at Langdale End, on the Moors ofthe North Riding of Yorkshire, and is in the collection of the Rev. , It has been surface-chipped over part of one face,but on the other it still shows the central ridge of the flake fromwhich it was made. The sides are neatly serrated. Fig. 330 represents a broader and less distinctly barbed form. Theoriginal was found at Amotherby, near Malton, and is chipped over bothfaces. I have another longer specimen from Sherburn, the base of whichis less indented. Allied to this longer form, but having the sides morecurved, is that shown in Fig. 331. The original was found by the Greenwell, , in one of the barrows examined by him atWeaverthorpe, Yorkshire. Varieties of this form, with the sides more orless straight, are of not unfrequent occurrence in Yorkshire. Th


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Keywords: ., bookcentury1800, bookdecade1870, bookidancientstone, bookyear1872