occurring (including its secondary compounds) no less than 126 times in Dres. and 33 times in Tro.-Cort.
Beneath section d are the remains of red numerals and of heads and headdresses of figures which are now too much erased to give any basis for comment.
A most marked feature of the Codex is the very large number of Tun-compounds, a feature confined exclusively, with one exception, to the present pages 2 to 11, and pages 23, 24. A classified list shows 28 compounds of this glyph,
20 of these showing the subfix, and combined with a face or other prefix. The connexion of this fact with the Tun-bases of section a, and with the katun-rounds shown by the Ahau-series above referred to, is manifest.
To sum up the general characteristics of this side of the MS., and without attempting to interpret any separate glyphs, we find the following data:
The Cimi-compound
and its sub-compound