Rough Stone Monuments and Their Builders by T. Eric (Thomas Eric) Peet
page 50 of 151 (33%)
page 50 of 151 (33%)
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Fées near Arles (Fig. 12), in which a passage (_a_) with a staircase at
one end and two niches (_b b_) in its sides leads into a narrow rectangular chamber (_c_). The total length is nearly 80 feet. Another tomb of the same type, La Grotte du Castellet, contained over a hundred skeletons, together with thirty-three flint arrow or spear-heads, one of which was stuck fast in a human vertebra, a bell-shaped cup, axes of polished stone, beads and pendants of various materials, 114 pieces of _callaïs_, and a small plaque of gold. On the plateau of Ger near the town of Dax are large numbers of mounds, some of which contain cremated bodies in urns and others megalithic tombs. Bertrand saw in this a cemetery of two different peoples living side by side. But it has since been shown that the cremation mounds belong to a much later period than those which contain megalithic graves. In these last the skeletons were found seated around the walls of the chamber accompanied by objects of flint and other stone, beads of _callaïs_, and small gold ornaments. [Illustration: FIG. 12. Plan and section of La Grotte des Fées, Arles, France (_Matériaux pour l'histoire de l'homme_, 1873).] [Illustration: FIG. 13. The so-called dolmen-deity, from the tombs of the Petit Morin. (After de Baye.)] France has also its rock-hewn tombs, for in the valley of the Petit-Morin is a series of such graves. A trench leads down to the entrance, which is closed by a slab. The chamber itself is completely underground. In the shallower tombs were either two rows of bodies with a passage between or separate layers parted by slabs or strata of sand. In the deeper were seldom more than eight bodies, in the extended or |
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