DEPARTMENT OE ANTHROPOLOGY 151 
stituted for the usual mask, and another has the wrapping re- 
moved, so that a good idea of the state of preservation may be 
gained. 
Case 2. — Mortuary papyrus of a lady named Isty. 
Case 3. — Mummies of two young children with elaborate gilt 
masks. 
Case 4. — Contains neatly prepared mummies in their orig- 
inal coffins, one of which is wood, and one, a unique specimen, 
of interlaced bulrushes. 
Case 5. — Two mummies of women in plain wooden coffins. 
Ptolemaic period 325 to 44 B. C. 
Case 6. — Contains a coffin. 
Case 7. — Contains a coffin. 
Case 8. — Contains a coffin. 
Case 9. — Coffins and mummy of a lady named Tentat. 
Thebes, XXII Dynasty, 10th century, B. C, presented by “The 
Railroad Table of the Chicago Club.” 
Case 10. — Mummy case, containing the body of a lady named 
Dje-Mutesankh. Thebes, XXI Dynasty (about 1000 B. C.). 
Presented by Mr. James W. Scott. 
Case 11. — Contains a coffin. 
Case 12. — Contains a coffin. 
Case 13. — Contains a coffin. 
Case 14. — Contains a coffin. 
Case 15.-— Mummy case of a lady named Naja-Rames. XXXII 
Dynasty, B. C. 700. Presented by Mr. F. H. Winston. 
Case 16. — ^Contains a coffin. 
Case 17.— -Mummy of a man named Pu-Nefer. XIX Dy- 
nasty, B. C. 1200. 
Case 18.— Mummy of a lady named Men, in coffin with light 
colored lid with yellow stripes, containing inscriptions; XXII 
Dynasty, B. C. 1000. 
Case 19. — Casts of Egyptian rulers, etc. 
Case 20. — Busts and fragments of stone statues. 
Case 21. — Cast of Rosetta stone. 
Case 22. — Mummy of a woman in a sitting position. 
Case 23.— Mummies of cats, dogs, jackals, hawks, alligators, 
etc. 
Case 24. — Tomb tablets of stone of various periods. 
Case 25. — False doorway of tomb of nobleman Unis-Onekh. 
