CAVICORNIA. 365 
There is also a number of humeri, mostly fragments of the middle part without 
articulation. Only one proximal part and four distal parts are in good condition. 
The measurements indicate the same important rule—that the bones of the lower 
layers are much larger in size than those of the higher layers, and that those 
from +25 feet are approximately of the same size as those of Bos brachyceros. 
The same rule is good for the radius, of which we have only four good pieces. 
We have the distal part, No. 1114, from the —15-foot layer, undoubtedly belonging 
to a younger specimen of the wild Bos namadicus, as is shown by the dimensions 
and the heavier and harder composition of the bones. As is proved by several 
other bones, such as phalanges, the wild animal appears from time to time in the 
layers near the level of the plain, but still decreasing proportionately in number, 
and seeming to disappear with the + 20-foot layer. 
All metacarpal bones were badly injured; only one has been restored and 
this shows a close concordance with the Apis of Paris, while another from the 
+ 20-foot layer approaches in size the Bos brachyceros of the Schlossberg. 
I must here treat another question. It might seem probable that the smaller 
bones of the higher layers are those of younger animals of the same kind as the 
larger. This opinion is certainly true as regards the lower layers, as the smaller 
bones of these strata show very decided marks of youth; but this is not so with 
the smaller bones above +23 feet. All those which are mentioned in the meas- 
urement table are of adult animals. It seems very probable, therefore, that the 
higher layers contained a smaller breed of cattle which was formed there by the 
physiographical influence on the climate and on the production of food during the 
period of aridity at the end of culture period I, or which came into Anau at the same 
time as the camel, the goat, the hornless sheep, and the shepherd-dog. 
But the long-horned larger bovid does not entirely disappear in the metal 
period* of the kurgan; several larger extremity bones show his presence among 
the smaller cattle. Among the phalanges there are in the lower strata several 
which in size correspond wholly to those of Bos primigenius and which are even 
considerably larger than those of the Apis of Paris. 
The measurements of the femora from the North Kurgan, Anau, agree well, 
in the measurable dimensions, with those of Bos brachyceros and are considerably 
smaller than those of the Apis skeleton. The same applies to the tibie. 
The metatarsi show also, in part, dimensions which indicate a somewhat 
more slender-limbed cattle than was the Egyptian long-horned cattle. 
The measurements of the lower jaws of the first period correspond to those 
of the extremities and show the same dimensions as those of the family of the 
recent Bos macroceros, as is easily seen in the agreement of the few lower-jaw 
measurements with those of a mummy skull from Abadieh, and of the Hungarian 
bull of the Hofmuseum of Vienna (plate 81, fig. 2). 

* Culture II.—R. P. 
