156 SMITHSONIAN MISCELLANEOUS COLLECTIONS VOL. 83 



loid notch or foramen today ; quite similar in the two bones. Proces- 

 sus supracondyloideus — no trace on left ; on right bone low rugosity. 



The damage on left does not seem to have been a complete fracture, 

 but more a crushing one in the outer part of the articular facet and 

 anterior and outer part about the coronoid fossa, the injury taking 

 place probably when the subject was quite young. 



The ulna. — Left ulna : head was broken early in life, at the same 

 time that the humerus was injured, but was well healed and joint 

 was useful. Body quite straight, shape prismatic, with slight indica- 

 tion of external (fourth) border and slightly concave on both antero- 

 median and antero-lateral surfaces. 



Right ulna : more than one-half missing ; in upper third was bent 

 backwards more than left ; bones of about same strength. 



Radius. — Right bone alone. Pronounced arching outward in middle 

 third ; otherwise not extraordinary. 



The clavicle. — The piece of right male clavicle shows that the bone 

 was longer than in modern man but of submedium thickness. It dif- 

 fers from modern bones also in the form of the shaft, which proxi- 

 ■ mally is clearly prismatic, and in the distal extremity beyond the 

 coracoid tuberosity, where the bone was relatively thicker but decid- 

 edly narrower than are modern male clavicles. There is no deltoid 

 tubercle, and the anterior curvature in this place is more pronounced 

 than in modern bones. 



The scapula. — Present, a portion of the right bone, including the 

 glenoid cavity. Original notes : The bone is strong but not excessively 

 so. The glenoid ca\nty seems to be inclined somewhat more backward 

 than in modern bones. The dorsal surface of the axillary border 

 shows a somewhat marked secondary ridge for the insertion of teres 

 minor. For comparative notes see Boule's Memoir on the La Chapelle 

 Remains. 191 3, pp. 121, 124. 



The ribs. — Present, five pieces of ribs. Some of the fragments 

 are stout, one measuring 17 mm. in breadth and 11 mm. in thickness. 

 One piece of a rib shows a slight circular thinning of the bone (noticed 

 also by Bardeleben), probably representing an old fracture. 



The pelvis. — The pelvis, with other portions of the skeleton, has 

 been studied especially by Klaatsch (see bibliography). The writer's 

 original notes, which quite agree with those of Klaatsch but point 

 out some additional features, are as follows : 



Present, the larger part of the left os innominatum ; missing, the 

 pubic parts. The bone is powerful, especially in region of ileo- 

 pectineal line and at the sacral articulation. Ilium rather flat, high, 

 and bent more outward from the i-p line than in modern pelves. 



