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Chap. X.
BAZINAS AND CHOUCHAS.
399

and Bona. But, in fact, there is no conceivable combination which does not seem to be found in these African cemeteries; and did we know them all, they might throw considerable light on some questions that are now very perplexing.

The chouchas are found sometimes isolated, and occasionally 10 to 12 feet apart from one another in groups. In certain localities the summits and ridges of the hills are covered with them, while on the edges of steep cliffs they form fringes overhanging the ravines.

In both these classes of monuments the bodies are almost always found in a doubled-up posture, the knees being brought up to the chin, and the arms crossed over the breast,[1] like those in the Axevalla tomb described above (page 312).

Rude Stone Monuments 0425a.png

167.
Tumuli, with Intermediate Lines of Stones.


Rude Stone Monuments 0425b.png

168.
Group of Sepulchral Monuments, Algeria.


The most remarkable peculiarity of the tumuli and circles in Algeria is the mode in which they are connected together by double lines of stones—as Mr. Flowers expresses it, like beads on a string—in the manner shown in woodcut No. 167. What the object of this was has not been explained, nor will it be easy to guess, till we have more, and more detailed, drawings than we now possess. Mr. Féraud's plate xxviii.[2] shows such a line zigzagging


  1. 'Mémoires, etc., de Constantine,' 1864, pp. 109, 114.
  2. 'Mémoires, etc., de Constantine.'