158 



ANTHROPOLOGICAL, SURVEY IN ALASKA 



[ETH. ANN. 46 



The condyloid process of the lower jaw is high, mandibular notch 

 deep. The whole jaw is strong but not thick or massive. It is In- 

 dianlike, not Eskimoid, in all its features. The teeth are of good 

 medium size. 



Skull No. 333383.— -Of this skull I brought the right parietal with 

 about one-third of the frontal; Mr. Krieger, a year later, the remain- 

 der of the frontal. Other parts are missing. 



The specimen was evidently a good-size female skull, normal, un- 

 deformed, probably mesocephalic in form, and moderately high. The 

 thickness of the bones is not above moderate. 



Cm. 



Diameter frontal minimum 9.7 



Diameter frontal maximum 12.5 



Diameter nasion-bregma 11. 1 



Skull No. 333950. — Of the third skull, recovered from the sands 

 of the beach at low water in 1927 by Mr. Lawrence, there are only 

 the two parietals. The specimen is that of a young adult female. 

 The bones, rather submedium in thickness, indicate a skull of slightly 

 smaller size and slightly shorter than the preceding but of much the 

 same general type. 



The skeletal parts of mate No. 332513. — Humeri : The long bones 

 all give the impression of straightness, length, and of a certain 

 gracility of form combined with strength, but without massiveness. 

 The right humerus presents a small but distinct supracondylar proc- 

 ess, a rarity among Indians. The fossa? are not perforated. Meas- 

 urements : 



The shaft approaches type IV (quadrilateral). There is but small 

 curvature. 



Right ulna: Lacks the olecranon; shaft prismatic, with anterior 

 and posterior surfaces fluted; but a moderate curvature backward 

 upper third. 



