bark cloth masks, shell necklaces, carved dance 
wands, etc. 
e. Southeastern New Britain (Sulka). 
Pith headdresses and masks, etc. 
11. New Ireland. 
War clubs, fishing: nets and snares, dance masks, 
colored wood carvings and figures, etc. 
I. Ground Floor Hall. Egyptian Archaeology. 
(Beginning at foot of stairs from center of Edward 
E. Ayer Hall.) 
1. Mummies and Mummy Cases. 
(The arrangement is chronological.) 
a. Pre-Dynastic Burial. (Before 3400 B.C.) 
b. Middle Kingdom. (2100-1800). Three cases. 
c. The Empire. (1600-1100). Two cases. 
d. Period of Decadence. (1100-700). Five cases. 
e. The Restoration. Saitic Period. (700-500). Six 
cases. 
f. Persian Period. (500-332). Four cases. 
g. Ptolemaic Period. (332-30). Five cases. 
h. Roman Period. (30 B.C.-395 A.D.) Seven cases. 
i. Cut leather Corselet from Thebes. (16th Cen¬ 
tury B.C.) 
2. Mummies of sacred animals. 
3. Papyri. (Originals and one facsimile.) 
4. Textile mummy covers. 
5. Seated Sekmet. 
6. Standing Sekmets. (Three.) 
7. Tomb of Unasankh. 
8. Tomb of Neteruser. 
9. Miscellaneous tomb sculptures. Seven cases. 
10. Vases of marble and other stones. 
11. Vases of alabaster. 
12. Ancient Egyptian pottery. 
13. Greek, Roman, Cypriote and other pottery. 
14. Bronze and stone figures of gods. 
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