Primaeval Man in the Valley of the Lea. 105 examination. The pebble-gravels also, such as one sees in the large pit in Silver Street, Edmonton, and on the higher positions to the west of Enfield, are unproductive; these gravels are extremely ancient, and probably of marine origin. Lastly, the lower gravels in the immediate neighbourhood of and under the present streams are generally unproductive of implements; they, however, now and then contain a stray example or two, undoubtedly washed down from a higher level. The productive gravels in the Lea Valley are almost in- variably those found between the 50 feet and the 100 feet contour-lines as marked on the Ordnance Maps. In other words, where the surface of the ground is between 50 and 100 feet above the Ordnance datum, there the implements will certainly be found. If one goes above the 100 feet line the implements become rare, although not absent; for in one instance I found an implement near Ealing Dean in gravel 164 feet above the Ordnance datum. Mr. Evans records the finding of an implement 300 feet above the Valley of the Darent, in Kent, and 500 feet above the level of the sea; Mr. Benjamin Harrison, of Ightham, in Kent, has found implements in the valley of a tributary of the Medway, a southern affluent of the Thames, at 400 feet above the Ordnance datum and 150 feet above the nearest stream; and Mr. F. C. J. Spurrell has found an implement near Erith, at a height of 175 feet. As a rule, though not without exception, it may be considered that the higher the implements are found above the Thames-level the more ancient they are. In positions removed from a great river the height of the nearest stream must always be considered. There is no tributary of the Thames near the 164 feet position mentioned by me north of Ealing; and it seems impossible to avoid the conclusion that the Thames or some other river once flowed at that level, and that primaeval man made his implements on the elevated terrace. Near where I live at Highbury, there is gravel close to "Christ Church" at 140 feet above the Thames, and there I recently saw an implement disinterred. This high position, clearly, was once