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Published online by Cambridge University Press: 11 October 2013
In a note at the end, of his preface to Perachora I (1940), Mr. T. J. Dunbabin mentions a new site which he had discovered on the summit of Mount Lutraki. I visited the site (cf. Fig.) in July 1949 and found a good fragment of a sima lying among the débris on the small platform (Plate 6(a)) immediately S.W. of the summit. The platform measures barely six feet by four feet in its present state, but there is reason to suppose that it was formerly larger.
2 Note on p. vii.
3 The mountain is 3000 feet high, and is the most prominent feature on the Perachora. It is precipitous near the summit and well wooded on the flanks.
4 Hell. IV, v.
5 Hell. IV, v, 3.
6 Ed. 2, ix, 479.
7 Perachora I (1940), 17, n. 2.
8 Cf. especially T. 40, Corinth IV, 1, 104.