Page:Early Man in Britain and His Place in the Tertiary Period.djvu/228

200 2. That of the cave of Moustier, or the "Epoque Moustérien," characterised by the presence of flakes worked on one side only, and, according to Mr. Evans, of choppers and ovato-lanceolate implements, somewhat like those of the preceding stage No. 1. In England implements of these forms occur in the cave-earth of Cresswell Crags, of Kent's Hole, and of Wookey Hole.

3. That of the "station" or camping-ground of Solutré, or the "Epoque Solutrien," in which elaborately chipped lance-heads (Figs 67, 68), and leaf-shaped