486 SKELETONS EXCAVATED IN NORTH KURGAN. 
was bent in such a position as to bring the hand opposite the face and on a level 
with it, while the right arm was extended down at an angle of 40° with the trunk. 
In front of this body and parallel with its main axis lay two air-dried bricks, 
7.5 inches long by 2.5 inches wide, set on edge. At a right angle with these, 1.5 
inches from the top of the skull, I came upon another brick of indeterminable 
length, but the same thickness. The three were laid in so deliberate a fashion 
as to suggest an attempt at sepulture. Between the heels and the end of the 
spine four lapis-lazuli beads (see N.K. 50, plate 4o, fig. 6) came to light, drilled 
from both flat surfaces so that the hole was roughly double-conical. Four inches 
back of the neck appeared a smooth, clay, plummet-shaped object, possibly also 
a burial gift. Skeleton, bricks, and gifts all lay on an even bed of ashes mixed 
with small pieces of charcoal, resting on a layer of hard-burnt earth. 
Skeleton No. to.—In terrace vil on the southerly slope of the kurgan, the 
workmen came upon traces of human remains at +29.5 feet. These proved to 
be the jumbled bones of a child, evidently hauled about and dislocated by an 
animal, for I found a burrowextending straight down through the middle of it all. 
Two feet below this level, in what seemed to have been the bottom of the burrow, 
the missing bones that belonged above were found, together with two crania of 
small rat-like rodents. ‘The loose earth that had filled the hole from the hillside 
above had allowed so much dampness to enter that all the bones were in an 
extremely fragile condition. 
Skeleton No. 15.—In the same terrace vil, and at the same level, + 29.5 feet, 
though nearer the outer edge of the hill, were found the cranium and a few vertebrze 
and long bones of a young child. The position in which the body had lain was 
indeterminable, and the bones fell to pieces as soon as they had dried. 
Skeleton No. 9.—On April 7, in terrace v, we came upon a child burial at a 
height of 29 feet. No traces of the cranium could be found, though four teeth 
lay in an orderly row as if there had been no disturbance. The main axis of the 
body was approximately southwest to northeast. In the softer earth about the 
pelvis and lower limb-bones, I took out 1,066 minute white beads, apparently of 
stone (N.K.222, plate 40, fig. 5). They were cylindrical, about ;,-inch in diameter 
and length, and so delicately bored that a very fine needle was required to thread 
them. Their presence on the leg-bones and pelvis, and their absence on the upper 
parts of the body suggest that they might have been sewn to a kirtle or other 
garment, and not used in strings, as were the larger beads we found later. 
Skeleton No. 2 (3).—The next burial in order of altitude appeared in terrace I 
at +28 feet. It was the skeleton of a young child lying on its right side in a con- 
tracted position. From the top of the cranium to the end of the spine measured 
but 13 inches and the knees were so drawn up that the greatest width of the body 
in position was 8 inches. ‘The main trend of the body was southwest and north- 
east. The right arm bones lay parallel with and behind the vertebre, the left 
arm bent to bring the hand palm down in front of the face. (See fig. 535.) 
When the bones were removed they were found to have been laid on a hori- 
zontal layer of wood-ashes and charcoal varying from 2 to 3 inches in depth and 
