MAN FROM THE FARTHEST PAST 
regretted owner, Hrdlicka studied the remains the second 
time (1923); and finally in 1927, thanks to the courtesy 
of the sons of Lohest, he was enabled to examine the. 
originals, still in their house, for the third time. At the 
time of his second visit, in 1923, Prof. A. Rutot and his 
assistant made it possible for him also to visit the cave. 
The skeletons are currently known as No. 1 and No. 2. 
To No. 1 (Plate 34) Fraipont and Lohest attributed: 
The vault of a skull 
Two portions of an upper jaw, 
with the three right molars, 
the two right premolars, the 
left canine and left lateral in- 
cisors 
A nearly complete lower jaw, 
with all (16) teeth 
The left clavicle 
The right humerus, which has 
lost its upper epiphysis, and 
the shaft of the left humerus 
The left radius, without the 
lower epiphysis 
The proximal extremities of the 
two ulnae 
The nearly entire right femur 
The complete left tibia 
The right calcaneum 
The parts attributed by the two authors to the second 
subject are: 
The vault of a skull 
Two portions of the upper jaw 
with twelve teeth 
Two fragments of the lower jaw 
with the molar teeth 
Loose teeth belonging to the 
lower jaw 
Fragments of the scapulae of 
two humeri without upper 
extremities 
The shaft of the right radius 
The proximal two-thirds of the 
left femur 
The left caleaneum 
The left astragalus 
Besides these parts, there are seven vertebrae, a right 
patella, twenty-four fragments of ribs, and eleven bones 
[ 100 ] 
