34 BUREAU OF AMERICAN ETHNOLOGY [BULL. 38 
the same shape as the incisors. . . . The size and shape of the bones of the 
limbs correspond to those of a man of ordinary stature, and from the appear- 
ance of the teeth the man must have been about 40 years old. 
The writer saw the specimens in 1902. The illustrations in La 
Naturaleza (vu, no. 16) and in The American Naturalist (xrx, no. 8, 
Fic. 4.—Remnant of the skull of the ‘‘ Hombre del Pejion.” (After Barcena, 
in La Naturaleza, vit, no. 16.) 
1885), particularly the former, give a fair view of the mass containing 
the skull (figure 4). Altogether, there is not enough of the material 
to warrant any conclusion as to the race of the individual; what 
there is suggests the Indian. There is no excessive prognathism or 
