Published online by Cambridge University Press: 08 January 2012
The generosity of an anonymous benefactor to the Research Fund of the Society enabled further work to be carried out in 1927 on the Findon Park Iron Age village site, which is situated just above the 500-ft. contour on a broad flat southward-sloping ridge one mile to the north of Cissbury. We wished to obtain information as to the range of date of the occupation, and the culture of the inhabitants, additional to that reported in Archaeologia, Ixxvi.
page 449 note 1 Prehistoric and Roman Settlements on Park Brow, , Wolseley, Smith, , and Hawley, , p. 12.Google Scholar In this paper referred to as the Park Brow report.
page 450 note 2 Pit A, opened last year by Mr. , Wolseley (Park Brow, p. 12),Google Scholar was 6 ft. deep.
page 451 note 1 As shown by the pottery.
page 451 note 2 Mr. H. A. Hyde, M.A., Keeper of Botany in the National Museum of Wales, who kindly examined the material, reports that the samples of charcoal submitted to him are exclusively oak.
page 453 note 1 Pits not included in this series (D, G, J, K) had nothing complete enough to justify illustration, but their pottery covered the same two sub-periods.
page 459 note 1 Remains of horse were also found at Park Brow in the Hallstatt settlement site. These include a skull now in the Brighton Museum. G.R.W.
page 459 note 2 ‘A Settlement of the Early Iron Age (La Tene I, Sub-period) on Merthyr Mawr, Glamorgan’; Appendix I “Arch. Camb., June 1927).