Page:The Ancient Stone Implements (1897).djvu/121

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A TYPE COMMON IN THE EASTERN COUNTIES.
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I commence with those of the first sub-division, in flint. The first specimen I have engraved, Fig. 43, is a representative of a common type, and was found at Santon Downham, between Brandon and Thetford, on the borders of Norfolk and Suffolk, where, also, implements

Fig. 43.—Santon Downham, Suffolk. 1/2

belonging to the Palæolithic Period have been discovered. The sides were originally sharp, but have been slightly rounded by grinding. The faces still show, in many places, the surface originally produced by chipping, but all projections have been ground away.