- 39 — 
position (transversely across the epigastrium) where the liver 
• was usually put and the liver was found in the region (vertically 
in the right side ) of the abdomen usually occupied by the 
intestines. 
There can be absolutely no doubt that the persons who em- 
balmed these bodies, deliberately and of set purpose put Amset 
with the liver and not Kahhsenuj] as Pettigrew stated. It is 
worthy of note in this connection that when Mr. Quibell and I 
unrolled the contents of a Canopic Jar of Thua (mother of 
Amenhotep Ill's wife) we found the liver in the Kabhseiiuf Jar. 
Whether this is sufficient to justify us in supporting Pettigrew's 
statement so far as the new Empire is concerned must remain an 
open question for the present : but it seems most improbable that, 
if this be so, they should have suddenly changed the association 
of the Genii and the viscera. 
Hapi w^as associated with the lung ( ? left) or lungs in eight 
(or possibly nine) out of fourteen cases, with the stomach in one 
(or possibly three), with intestine in two cases and the liver in 
one. If we could be more sure of the identity of the lung in 
every case the proportion of cases associated with Hapi would 
almost certainly rise, because it is precisely the best preserved 
examples which have provided us with the eight cases. 
laumâutef was certainly associated with the stomach in two 
cases and almost certainly in four others ; in five cases with pieces 
of intestine which might possibly be stomach or have been mis- 
taken for stomach ; with the liver in one case and a lung in one 
(or possibly three) cases. It is worthy of note that it was 
precisely in those two cases in which the organs were best pre- 
served that the stomach was recognised, which suggests that the 
great difficulty in identifying this viscus is the real cause of the 
seeming irregularity in its association. 
Kabhsenuf was associated with intestines in eight cases, with 
