disconnected before being deposited, as none was in its normal anatomical position. A human jaw, for instance, had been broken into two portions, one, having a whitish appearance, lay in one part of the vault, and the other, having a brown colour, was found at some distance from the former, but yet when
FIG. 26.— Two Brachycephalic Skulls from Trou du Frontal, near Furfooz, one female (1) and the other male (2).
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brought into contact the portions fitted exactly. A large slab placed in front converted the recess into an ossuary. The skeletons were pronounced by Pruner-Bey to belong to a Mongoloid race. The skulls were apparently of a mixed character— more brachycephalic than dolichocephalic but only two (Fig. 26), a male and female, were sufficiently entire to