198 



REPORT OF NATIONAL MUSEUM, 1887 



nasal was 48 millimeters, the nasal width 25, the nasal index was 52, 

 and the nose was mesorbiue. The palatomaxillary length was 5G, 

 the palato- in axillary width was 72 millimeters ; the palatomaxillary in- 

 dex was 128, and the roof of the mouth was brachyuranic. The teeth 

 were all erupted and not worn. The cranial sutures were all unossifled. 



Fig. 32. 



Navajo Cradle: Full-rigged. Of 

 the foorer sort. 



From Arizona. 



Fig. 33. 



Navajo Cradle, with wooden hood and 

 awning of dressed buckskin. 



Cat. No. 12/615, U S. N. M. Fort Wingate. New Mexico 

 Collected by Dr. R. VV. Shufeldt, U. S. A. ) 



The parieto-sphenoid suture in the pterion was 19 millimeters in antero- 

 posterior diameter. There were no Wormian bones. The anterior end 

 of the inferior turbinated bone was almost in the same plane as the an- 

 terior nares. 



The Comanche cradle (6970) is the most primitive cradle in the Na- 

 tional Museum (Fig. 34). It is a strip of black bear-skin 30 inches long 

 and 20 wide, doubled together in form of a cradle-frame. Along the 

 side edges loops of buckskin are made to receive the lacing. The loops 

 are formed as follows: A buckskin string is passed through a hole in 

 the bear-skin and the longer end passed through a slit or cut in the 

 shorter end. The long end is then passed through the next hole and 

 drawn until a loop of sufficient size is left; a slit is made in the string 

 near the last hole passed through, and then the whole lashing is drawn 



