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A Prehistoric Flint-Pit at Ringland
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 25 October 2013
Extract
In 1906 I described a “Cissbury type” station at Ringland, Norfolk, the implements lying abundantly on the surface of two fields and covering an area of about 440 yards in length by 90 yards in width. The fields are at the foot of a steep tree-clad ridge known as Cobb's Hills, and slope gently to the river Wensum which is but a few yards distant from the lower part of the fields and is here about 34 feet above O.D. Some of the implements were described and figured in our “Proceedings,” and the site has yielded about 900 implements and several thousand flakes.
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- Original Papers
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- Copyright © The Prehistoric Society 1915
References
page 148 note * Trans. of the Norfolk and Norwich Naturalists' Society, Vol. VIII. pp. 224–228Google Scholar.
page 148 note † Vol. I., pp. 340–1, and Plate LXXVI.
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