178 REVIEWS. 
ular triangle in shape, somewhat concave on the face, where is carved in profile a human hea 
achment by threads to some portion of the dress of the wearer, It is polished 
paria and S5 and Hepernes: pu. an d thr ae inches by one and — It has its 
formerly Maye r, Mus eum, of Lon 
"m — PRÉ gn specimen * peculiar. and very interesting It is a sey irregular glo 
on d = 
Fig. 53. eter. On three sides, if I may ise the ex- 
prennon in respect of a sphere, are as lua d 
56,57. As I shall "e MOM to my 
to ned. a siniple NM perfect gione 
aeter, pierced th 
ws a hole sufficiently large to admit a sions 
“Fics 58 and 59 - types of a large clas 
of what may be called a orna- 
— vin no Nee signifie j 
and 61, howe iis may have 
a Minos trate signifieance. "The latter 
(Fra. 61) is a fr t 
Fig. 54. 
two-tenths in diameter over the rim, o one inch and one- 
indi e with a bore of atienda of an inch in diameter. 
The above described are fair types of 
the aes found at Ocosingo; but I pos- 
sess some other worked and engraved green- 
stones, worth oo. a in this con- 
nection. The first of thes 
ned globe, pierced, 
IG, e RE URGES to the engraved Assyrian ourth size. 
seals, or, as they are sometimes called, ‘Chaldean’ cylinders. 
It is a perforated cylindrical piece of heavy, opaque stone, of a dark sea-green color (ne ph- 
rite?), two inches long by an inch and one-tenth in diameter. In a kind of oval o r what 
Egyptian scholars would call a cartouche, is presented the profile of some divinity (tbe. Maya 
sed e corner of the 
an, , Among the things found by the conqueror of the Ttzaes, Ursua, 
