BANBURY CAMP, ESSEX. 139 bank is traceable from C to E, but, inasmuch as the ditch is clearly seen along the dotted line D, I cannot help thinking that the wall once skirted the eastward side of the ditch joining on to the centre at E. From B by the pond by G is another wall or loop joining at E the central part, and again from B by H is another wall traceable to a point north-west of the church and turning eastward. Of course it is cut by the road, but signs of it can be seen on the other side for a short distance. It is then obliterated to A, but it must, I think, have taken the course indicated. Between the "Griffin Inn" at K, and Frettons at A, the ground has been much cut away by the road and for houses and gardens, so there is nothing clear there, and the slope is considerable. All the Plan of Witham Camp. From a Survey by Mr. F. C. J. Spurrell.1 1 See paper on "Withambury," by Mr. Spurrell in the Essex Naturalist, vol, i. pp. 19-22. The plan of the Witham Camp is reproduced here to allow of ready comparison with that of Danbury.—Ed.