Published online by Cambridge University Press: 27 May 2014
page 426 note 1 Britton, D. in PPS, XXIX (1963), pp. 258–325Google Scholar.
page 427 note 1 PSAS, LXVIII (1933–1934), p. 11Google Scholar.
page 427 note 2 Information kindly given from the records of the Archaeology Division, Ordnance Survey; also Smith, J., Prehistoric Man in Ayrshire (1895), p. 135Google Scholar.
page 428 note 1 Bateman, T., Ten Years' Diggings (1861), pp. 166–7Google Scholar; see also Howarth, E., Catalogue of the Bateman Collection (1899), p. 186Google Scholar; J. Derbyshire A. and NHS, LXXIV (1954), pp. 142–3Google Scholar.
page 428 note 2 I am most grateful to the staff of the Sheffield City Museum, and especially to Mr G. Lewis, for help in studying this armlet, and for permission to re-publish it.
page 429 note 1 A number of flat axes have a silvery surface, probably an accidental feature, see Britton op. cit., p. 279.
page 429 note 2 Britton, op. cit., p. 279; Inv. Arch. G.B. 20, 6, where ‘two broken pieces of flat axes’ are mentioned as being associated with the armlet. When first seen by the author in the autumn of 1957 there was one piece of an axe exhibited. Sometime between 1961 and 1963 this disappeared from its case.
page 429 note 3 Ant. J., XXVIII (1948), pp. 179–80Google Scholar.
page 429 note 4 Ant. J., XV (1935), pp. 60–1Google Scholar; Inv. Arch. G.B. 20.
page 429 note 5 Britton, op. cit., pp. 263–328, especially 279–81.
page 429 note 6 Op. cit., p. 280.
page 429 note 7 Reg. no. 1959: 628. My thanks are due to Miss E. Prendergast for this information.
page 429 note 8 Armstrong, E. C. R., Catalogue of Irish Gold Ornaments (1920), p. 94, nos. 413–17Google Scholar, illustrated pl. xviii.