Published online by Cambridge University Press: 15 November 2011
In a paper describing the discovery and partial excavation of an Early Iron Age settlement on Park Brow Hill near Cissbury, published in the Antiquaries Journal, vol. iv, mention was made of the location of two other habitation sites on the hill—one Roman, and another probably occupied during the Bronze Age of Britain. It was to this latter site that I decided to attend in 1924, the object being to examine the relation between this settlement and that attributed to the Hallstatt–La Tène I period found on the top of the hill (see fig. a). The new site consists of a series of disturbed areas roughly circular, and lying on the slope of the hill facing south-west, about a furlong from the Hallstatt settlement (see fig. b).
page 14 note 1 The type is, however, found sporadically elsewhere, e.g. at Ashford, Middlesex, and Lambourn Down, Berks. (Arch. Journ. lxxviii, 53), both in the British Museum.
page 15 note 1 For example, in Madsen's Gravhoje og Gravfund fra Stenalderen i Danmark, pl. xxviii, cc.
page 24 note 1 For other examples see Mortimer, Forty Years' Researches, fig. 493; Hoare, Ancient Wilts., i, pl. vii; Archaeologia, xliii, p. 435; lxi, pl. lix, 2, p. 444; Wilts. Arch. Mag., xl, 35 (Ledbury Camp).