The implements which Mr. G. W. Smith has been good enough to exhibit at my suggestion are a selection from no less than one hundred and seventy in his collection from a small and shallow pit on high ground overlooking the Thames, near Tilehurst Station, 3 miles north-west of the centre of Reading. It is perhaps unfamiliar ground to members of this Society, but has been well studied in the past, and the following list, together with other papers quoted in the text, will put the reader in possession of the principal facts at present ascertained as to the geology and flint-finds of the neighbourhood:—
Quart. Journ. Geol. Soc., LIV., 600 (sketch-map of the high gravels near Reading, Tilehurst and Goring Heath being marked alike).
Q.J.G.S., XLIX., 311, from which the accompanying section of the Thames Valley is derived (Fig. 8).
Q.J.G.S., XLVIII., 40, where the Tilehurst plateau-gravel is described as glacial.
Proc. Geol. Assoc., XV., 157 and 308.
Proc. Geol. Assoc., VIII., 348 (heights given, above the river and Ordnance datum, of flint-finds).
Berks, Bucks, and Oxon Archæological Journal, II., 16 (Treacher).
Trans. Berks Archæol. and Archit. Soc., 1881–2 (Stevens).