112 Notes on Bowl’s Barrow. 
45. Portion of sacrum anchylosed to ilium. 
46. Sacrum and right portion of innominatum. Gnawed. 
47, Sacrum. 
48. Clavicle; length, 149 millimetres. 
49. Clavicle: length, 149 millimetres, 
0. ‘ 
% | Two pieces of leg bone, apparently cut to a point. 
52. Head of femur with extensive exostosis from rheumatic 
arthritis. Gnawed. 
53. Shaft of tibia. Much gnawed by rodents. 
54. Shaft of tibia. Much gnawed. 
55. Shaft of femur. Gnawed by rodents, and much pitted. 
56. Shaft of femur. Gnawed. 
57. Shaft of tibia. Gnawed. 
58. Shaft of femur. Gnawed. Marks of cutting (?). 
59. Shaft of femur. Much gnawed. 
60. Shaft and distal end of femur. Much gnawed and showing 
circular pits. 
61. Tibia. Fraetured, showing cancellated plate (very thin). 
62. Portion of femur (?), with deep pits. 
63. Fragment of tibia. Much pitted. 
64. Fragment of fibula. Tuberculated. 
65. Fragment of cranium. 
66. Occiput, unsymmetrical, right side protuberant. 
67. Fragment of base of skull with foramen magnum. Bone 
more dense than others. Little decayed. 
68. Mastoid. Possibly belonging to No. 67. Dense and little 
decayed. 
As pointed out by Mr. Storer Bennet, the teeth in several in- 
stances are remarkably worn down by use. This is noticeable even 
in the upper bicuspid tooth of a child of about 12 years of age, 
which, though not fully developed, already bears marks of wear on 
the masticating surface. The surfaces of some of the worn teeth, 
from this barrow, slope at an angle of 45°; in a few cases (old 
persons) the angle isevenhigher. The oblique and cupped condition 
of these teeth fully corresponds with a description given by Dr. 
