MUSEUM NOTES. 239 ANTONINUS (Brass). Bust facing to right. (A.D. 138-161) Inscription. Gone. Reverse. Figure holding a sceptre in one hand, a cap in the other, s.c. cos iiii. This coin was issued in A.D. 154. ANTONINUS (Brass). Bust facing to right. Head is in good condi- tion. Inscription. Gone. Should read imp. caes. t. ael HADR. ANTONINUS AUG PIUS PP. Reverse. Figure of Concord looking to left holding two military ensigns tr. pot xxii. cos iiii sc ANTONINUS (Silver). Bust of Antonine facing to right. Antoninus & AUG PIUS PP TR P COS iii. AURELIUS Reverse. Bust of M. Aurelius facing to right. A.D. 161-180) Aurelius caesar Aug p ii f cos (Antonine made Aurelius his consort in ruling the Empire). LUCILLA (Brass). Bust facing to right, lucilla Augusta. (m. A.D. 164) Reverse. Female figure seated, a young boy on her knees, young girl before her and another boy behind, fecunuitas sc. (Lucilia was married to Lucius Verus A.D. 164). CARACALLA (Brass). Bust facing to right. (A.D. 211-217) Inscription. Gone, and reverse totally destroyed. CONSTANTINE (Brass). Armoured head facing to left. (A.D. 306-337) Inscription. Gone. Reverse. Wolf suckling the twins. This coin was issued A.D. 327 to 330. A broken, mutilated . specimen. " The pottery is selected from a bushel or two of potsherds recently excavated in digging brickearth—the pieces are of little importance in themselves but are of interest to us from the position of the discovery, being a little further N. and N.W. than the site of former finds, showing the still greater extent of the village. Those who are familiar with the plan in the handbook, descrip- tive of my collection on view in the Forest Museum, will remem- ber that a considerable area is shaded to indicate the pottery- yielding ground ; the recent discoveries would somewhat extend that shading, in the directions mentioned. "Another point of interest must be noted, Most of the more or less perfect vases and urns in the Forest Museum came from the more southern portion of the area (formerly excavated for gravel). Those were usually associated with undoubted evidence of cremation; we were then upon the cemetery or