Page:VCH Lancaster 1.djvu/281

From Wikisource
Jump to navigation Jump to search
This page needs to be proofread.

EARLY MAN again links the varieties of axes, in that it seems to have been used to some extent as an axe-hammer, though not fashioned for that purpose. A smaller implement of similar form was found in the old bed of the Roch [iormerly RoacA] stream, near Oakenrod, Rochdale, and is thus described by its former owner : ' It is 4 in. long, and the hole for the handle is unusually large, being nearly an inch in diameter. The clearly-marked ridge which runs on two sides of the stone would seem to indicate that the implement was made in imitation of a cast metal one.' * The surmise is more than possible. The smoothed perforated implements of stone are for the most part indubitably of the Bronze Age ; indeed Sir John Evans shows good reason to believe that perforated stone implements in general belong to a time subse- quent to the introduction of metal-working. A third example also from near Manchester, shown in fig. 6, is typical of this class. It was found near Turkey Lane, Queen's Park, Harpurhey, 3 ft. from the surface, in clay. It is of gritstone, described as 'grained sandstone, with decomposition on the surface.' Its length is 6|in., width 2| in., and greatest height 3 in. The top surface is gently hollowed towards the socket hole ; and the lower side is partly chipped and broken away. At the one end the sides curve rapidly to the sharpened edge, while the other end preserves its ori- ginal curved form unbroken. It is a good specimen. The annexed diagram is due to the courtesy of the curator of the Queen's Park Mu- seum at Manchester, where the object is preserved. To this class must be referred also a series of implements of larger and rougher character, all of them from North Lancashire. The record of them^ is fairly clear, and in some cases the implements themselves have been preserved. From Bowland is a specimen i o| in. long, with a width and depth respectively of 3 J in. The perforation varies from i|.in. to ijin. in diameter, and is placed far back from the sharp edge, dividing the implement at J to i of its length. The edge is very chipped and the opposite end preserves a well-rounded form. The object is heavy and massive in appearance ; it was obviously designed as a single axe and was used as such. It was found, it is related, in i860, in draining near Cow Ark in Bowland, 'a short distance from the Roman Road.' A second specimen is from Claughton. It was found near the surface of the ground in a field near the Hall, where it now remains. It is of a more solid and smaller design than the last. Its length is 7J in., with a width, however, of 4 in. and height of about 3^ in. The hole, which is more centrally placed, is unusually large, varying from ijin., in the middle, to 2 J in, in diameter. As in the previous instance, the broad cutting edge 1 Fishwick, op. cit. p. 13, with figure. The object is now in the Rochdale Museum. 2 Weld MSS. 221 Fig. 6. — Section of Stone Axe from Harpurhey, Manchester. Scale, I : 2 linear. (Queen's Park Museum, Manchester.)