No. 8 is a rough-sketch plan of the great temple of El Kab, inserted to show the position of the foundation deposits.
31. [Pl. II.]—1. The stone vessels of the Neolithic period and the Old Kingdom, as they were shown at University College. Only one was perfect; even those that look most complete were picked out in small pieces from the gravel or mud, and were put together by the help of our friends in England. On the right hand are five slate paint slabs of the later Neolithic type; nearer the wall are diorite bowls, alabaster tables, flat dishes of limestone and alabaster, a bronze ewer (from Ka-mena), and a pottery model of a granary.
No. 2 shows all the small objects from the important tomb with a majūr burial (166)—shells, ivory disc, ivory hairpins, a flint flake, a steatite cylinder, beads, ivory bracelets, two pots and two stone bowls. (For inscription on the cylinder v. [Pl. XX], 29).
No. 3 represents the objects from Ka-mena’s tomb as photographed in front of our house soon after being found (larger size in [Pl. III], 2).
No. 4 shows a mastaba wall when just excavated.
No. 5 is a view of our house with the stacks of pottery before it.
[Pl. III.]—No. 1. The sandstone statue of Nefer-shem-em.
No. 2. The bronze and stone objects from Ka-mena of the time of Sneferu, with whose name the flat diorite bowl below was inscribed. The central bowl is of very light-coloured, translucent diorite, and the deeper one of porphyry. Below are model tools in copper. (These are given in outline, [Pl. XVIII], 56-65.)
[Pl. IV.] (Note by Dr. Spiegelberg.)
1. Table of offerings from dry stream bed on desert near Amenhotep’s temple, dedicated with the usual formula addressed to Anubis, Osiris, and Nekhbet, by “the confidential friend of the king, the treasurer, chief prophet, destroying the evil (?) [Kfau? asf?]” ... and to his father “deserving well of his god, the confidential friend of the king, the treasurer,[A] chief prophet, privy councillor of the royal treasure Shema[.a].”