158 THE ARCHEOLOGICAL EXCAVATIONS IN ANAU. 
different color and differently formed were found with the skeleton 11 in terrace 
rat between +20.5 and +22.5 feet (N.K. 114; fig. 296; plate 4o, fig. 2): One 
large one, elongated, with four rounded edges of unequal size, made out of a yellow- 
white material; 58 small ones of similar stone, approximately double-conical, with 
truncated points; and 11 made from blood-red stone, nearly ring-shaped, but 
unequally cut (cf. fig. 296). 
With another skeleton (No. 13), in the same locality, +22 feet 5 inches, there 
occurred, besides the three lead spirals, two small white stone beads of about the 
oe! 294 (X0.5) same form and kind as those just mentioned (N.K. 
oo 143; fig. 297; plate 4o, fig. 3). The third skeleton, 
No. 12, found there had for a burial gift 67 small 
white stone beads (N.K. 144; fig. 298; plate 40, fig. 
8), most of them of the same form as those just de- 
scribed—cylindrical with beveled edges. The other 
x eM beads found are separate finds. One was barrel-shaped, 
| of white stone (N.K. 140; fig. 299; plate 4o, fig. 11) 
AH () from terrace 1, between +20 feet 5 inches and +22 
feet 5 inches; another, a small whitish stone bead, cylin- 
vam drical, with unequal sides; another, the half of a bead 
ee of polished marble in the form of an angular disk (N.K. 
241; fig. 300); both of the latter 
from the north digging 11, between 
+20 feet 5 inches and +24 feet 
96 (X05) 5 inches; and lastly, an angular 
bead of dead-white stone (N.K. 243; fig. 301) from north digging rv. 
The clay beads are either double-conical, like N.K. 152 (fig. 302), from terrace 
vil at +23 feet, or spherical, like N.K. 219 (fig. 303), from north digging 1, between 
— 20 feet 5 inches and — 24 feet 5 inches. Similar double-conical ones were found 
in the west digging between +13 feet 4 inches and +18 feet (N.K. 24); also in 
the shaft of the west gallery between o and —1 foot. 
Miscellaneous.—There is little else to be noted in the way of ornament. A 
clay knob, somewhat pear-shaped, with impressions in the upper edge (N.K. 57; 
fig. 304; plate 4o, fig. 13), comes from the north digging 11, between —12 and 
—13 feet. A more simple clay knob (N.K. 251) is shown in fig. 305 and plate 
40, fig. 12. An object made of gypsum (N.K. 43; fig. 306; plate 40, fig. 4), alsoa 
knob, is from north digging 1, between — ro feet and—11 feet 5 inches. An 
ornamental disk of gypsum with central hole (N.K. 112; fig. 307; plate 40, fig. 
14), is of undetermined derivation. 



FROM UPPER STRATA OF NORTH KURGAN, CULTURE II. 
Beads.—The beads of the upper strata are all burial gifts of the skeletons 
found in the terraces. Those found in terrace 1a (cf. above, page 89) are N.K. 
1, fig. 308; plate 4o, fig. 1); two carnelian beads, one light-colored and cylin- 
drical, the other dark and ring-shaped; a bead of lapis lazuli, bluish-white 
