The smaller round basket contained:

A blue glazed steatite scarab of the Hyksos Period (Pls. LXV, LXXII. 16).

17. A chair and a stool. These were broken and tucked between the foot of coffin No. 18 and the wall ([Pl. LXXI]). The chair made of wood has a low square seat of rush-work mesh plaited upon a frame and supported by four square legs; the legs are strengthened by cross-bars. The slanting, curved, compound back is dowelled into the frame of the seat, and it is stayed by uprights which are continuous from the back legs; it also had (now missing) a central strut at the back. These uprights and the central strut were fixed to the back of the chair by means of ivory pegs. The principal constructive joints of the main body of the chair are strengthened by angle-pieces of carved bent wood, and these angle-pieces when exposed to view are ornamented by being composed of several kinds of wood. The top rail of the back (missing) appears from some of the remaining ivory pegs to have been made of ivory. It measures 41 × 52 cms. square, the seat 28 cms. high, and the top rail of the back must have been something like 75 cms. when perfect. The stool had a similar seat to the chair, and it also has similar strengthening bars between the legs. It stands 16 cms. in height, and measures 38 × 35 cms. square.

18. Decorated anthropoid coffin of the New Kingdom. Ground colour white; head-dress and bands for hieroglyphs blue. The inscriptions, written in black, with linear hieroglyphs of the Intermediate Period style, do not give any name ([Pl. LXII]. 18).

Contents:—Mummy roughly wrapped. The sex was difficult to ascertain.

19. Viscera box. Small square box painted white and of inferior quality. The interior, divided into two compartments by a central partition, contained matter wrapped in linen like the viscera of a mummy.

20. Viscera box. Painted white, with the de hetep seten formula upon the lid giving the name

21. Plain rectangular flat-topped coffin. Like No. 75 (broken).

Contents:—Mummy of a man covered with a sheet. At the side of the left shoulder a wooden head-rest ([Pl. LXVIII]. 21), with, engraved upon its stem, the deities Bes and Taurt. On the third finger of the left hand a scarab mounted on a silver ring ([Pl. LXXII]. 21). The scarab is round-backed, of green glazed steatite, and has inscribed upon its base the ‘Divine Wife, Hatshepsût’.