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A Flint Dagger from Staythorpe, Notts., and other finds from the Newark area
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 27 May 2014
Abstract
- Type
- Notes
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- Copyright
- Copyright © The Prehistoric Society 1950
References
page 184 note 1 I am indebted to the contractors, Messrs Balfour Beatty & Co., through the Company's secretary, Mr A. S. Valentine, for permission to borrow and figure it, and to Mr Sneddon for information about the circumstances of the find.
page 184 note 2 Proc. Prehist. Soc., VI, p. 340Google Scholar.
page 184 note 3 One of these is being excavated by Mr K. D. M. Dauncey and the Newark Archaeological Committee.
page 184 note 4 Ant. J., XXI, pp. 133–43Google Scholar.
page 184 note 5 Phillips, in Arch. J., XCI, p. 180Google Scholar.
page 185 note 1 Grimes, loc. cit., p. 349.
page 185 note 2 Phillips, , Arch. J., XC, p. 147Google Scholar.
page 185 note 3 There is another route to the Trent at Nottingham, which leaves Sewstern Lane just south of Sewstern village and proceeds north-west through Waltham-on-the-Wolds and Harby; it is not so far marked by sites or finds, and was never important enough to get itself a name, but it may well be of prehistoric origin.
page 186 note 1 Both the Peterborough bowl and the Food-Vessel are in Newark Museum, and have been drawn by Miss F. Whissell, assistant curator there.
page 186 note 2 Most of the hoard is in the British Museum, except for one axe-head, which is in the Newark Museum.
page 186 note 3 Prehistoric Communities, p. 96.
page 186 note 4 Prehistoric Foundations, p. 273; Clark, J. G. D., in Antiquity, V, p. 424Google Scholar.
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