Marble; height, 2 feet 6¼ inches; length, 7 feet. Newton, I., pl. 97, No. 66; II., p. 777; Kirchhoff, Studien, 4th ed., p. 26; Roehl, I.G.A., 483; Roberts, Greek Epigraphy, p. 161; Mansell, No. 615.

18.Sphinx or lion, recumbent. This figure has been called a Sphinx or a lion-sphinx. The distinguishing marks of a Greek Sphinx are wanting, as the head is lost, and the figure is wingless.—Sacred Way, Branchidae.

Marble; height, 4 feet 2 inches; length, 6 feet 11½ inches. Antiqs. of Ionia, 2nd ed., I., p. 29; Ross, Arch. Zeit., 1850, p. 132; Müller, Denkmaeler, I., pl. 9, No. 33; Newton, II., p. 535; Milchhoefer, Athenische Mittheilungen, IV., p. 50.

19.Beardless male head, from an archaic statue. The left shoulder is preserved. The hair falls in tresses, as in the case of No. 9.—Branchidae.

Marble; height, 1 foot 3 inches; Rayet et Thomas, Milet et le Golfe Latmique, pl. 27.

20.Female head (unfinished (?)) from an archaic statue. The figure wears a veil which covers the whole of the head, except the face. The ears are indicated beneath the veil.—Branchidae.

Marble; height, 9 inches.

21.Relief, with figures moving to the right, in a dance. It is incomplete at both ends, and appears to have been part of a frieze formed of several slabs. On the left are a woman and a man joining hands. On the right is a woman between two men; of the man on the right only the right leg is preserved. The right hand of the woman is seen behind, while her left hand is held by the man before her. The man on the left of this group has some object, perhaps a cup, in his right hand which is stretched out behind him. Between the two groups, and in the background, a woman rushes to the right, holding branches (?) in her raised hands.

The men are considerably larger than the women. The women wear a plain chiton, the men a chiton and mantle. All have bracelets, and long hair, which falls in a peculiar manner over the forehead; one wears a taenia, the remainder have stephanae. All the limbs are indicated under the draperies, even those of the figures in the background, which are seen through their own draperies and those of their companions.—Presented by J. Scott Tucker, Esq., R.N. Karakewi (Teichioussa), near Branchidae.

Marble; height, 1 foot 9 inches; width, 2 feet 11 inches. Rayet et Thomas, Milet et le Golfe Latmique, pl. 27; Brunn, Denkmaeler, No. 101 B.