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0341 Explorations in Turkestan : Expedition of 1904 : vol.2
トルキスタンの調査 1904年 : vol.2
Explorations in Turkestan : Expedition of 1904 : vol.2 / 341 ページ(カラー画像)

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[Figure] 540 No.8 段丘VIIINo.8, Terrace VIII.
[Figure] 541 No.11 段丘IINo.11, Terrace II.
[Figure] 542 No.14 段丘IINo.14, Terrace II.

New!引用情報

doi: 10.20676/00000178
引用形式選択: Chicago | APA | Harvard | IEEE

OCR読み取り結果

 

SKELETONS EXCAVATED IN NORTH KURGAN.   489

the left upper arm (all that remained of that member) stretched back of the body at an angle of about 40° with it. The right upper arm bones were absent, but the lower arm was traceable, extending along the main axis. The little that remained of the cranium showed the sutures still open and the walls of almost paper-like thinness. (See fig. 54o.)

Skeleton No. Ir.—From the last skeleton which occurred on the south slope of the kurgan I was summoned by the workmen, who had come upon remains again in terrace II at + 22.5 feet. This burial, which I have numbered II, proved to be that of a child lying contracted on the right side, with the main axis running southwest and northeast. I found no traces of the right leg or right arm; but

,

C=. C3

Ca

ocy c

Fig. 540.—No. 8, Terrace VIII.

Fig. 541.—No. 11, Terrace II.   Fig. 542.—No. 14, Terrace II.

the left knee was drawn up at a right angle, and the left upper arm ran parallel with the vertebræ, the elbow being bent so that the hand lay out at the level of the pelvis. (See fig. 541.) From near the collar-bone I took out 58 small white stone beads (N.K. 114), many of them double-conical. One larger white stone bead of a cylindrical shape (N.K. 114, plate 4o, fig. 2) and II flat beads of red carnelian (N.K. I14, plate 4o, fig. 2).

To reach this skeleton it was necessary to remove a hearth-like layer of hard-burnt earth topped by a layer of ashes 1 to 3 inches thick; and after the bones had been lifted I came upon a similar hearth beneath, extending over about

4 feet square.

Skeleton No. 12.In the same terrace (ii) and at the same height, 22.5 feet, but about 5 feet north of No. 11, we uncovered a child 's bones lying in the position now so familiar—contracted on the right side, with the main axis southeast and