— 40 — 
lungs in three and possibly witli tlie liver in one case ont o£ twelve. 
In tlie other three cases, althougli it is not possible to identify the 
viscus associated with Kahhsenuf^ tlie liver is accounted for else- 
where : hence among the fifteen cases there is only one, and even 
that a doubtful, instance o£ the association o£ Kabhsenuf with 
the liver, which Pettigrew bas advanced. 
The figures vary considerably in size and niaterial. One set 
was niade o£ pottery but the others were made either partly or 
whoUy o£ wax. Sometinies they were made of niud with a thin 
veneer o£ wax : in other cases of pure wax : in others again of 
wax mixecl with other substances, probably resin and mud. 
In Pl. XVII, figure 3, the sniallest set found is represented. 
The figures are about 6 cm. long. They are usually almost twice 
as large and in one case were as long as 15 cm., and proportionally 
thick. In one case the busts only of the four Genii were repre- 
sented and in yet another the figures were eut out of a wax plate 
in a squatting form (Pl. III, also Pl. XIX). 
In Plate XIX the range of variation in size and shape of the 
figures of Hapl (figure 1) and Taumâvtef (figure 2) respectively 
are shown (on différent scales). Four différent sizes of mummy- 
shaped and one squatting Ape (Haj)/') are shown, two other 
Baboons wrapped in lungs and a bust also in part of a lung. 
Four différent sizes of mummy-shaped and one squatting figure 
of the Jackal (laumâutef) are shown, one other in a stomach 
and one in a liver and a bust in a pièce of intestine (? stomach). 
In Pl. XYII, figure 1, a typical set is shown : Amset (human) 
wrapped in liver, Hapi (Baboon) wrapped in lung^ Taumâutef 
(Jackal) in the stomach and Kabhsenuf (Hawk) with the intes- 
tines : the latter are shown on a much larger scale in figure 2. 
In Pl. XVIII another typical set is represented: Hapi with the 
left lung (figure 1), Taumâutef with the stomach (figure 2), 
Kablisenuf 'm ÛiQ m\(\iè,t oi the intestines (figure 3) and Amset 
