Dr. T. Tóth szerk.: Paleoanthropological studies (Anthropologia Hungarica 8/1-2. Budapest, 1968)
greatest in the Jutas findings (86 per cent), diminishing in the Szebény ones (40 per cent),the Kékesd skulls (35 per cent),the Előszállás skulls (29 per cent), and showing the lowest value in the Csákberény materia.. ^3 per cent). The rate of mesocrany is the highest in the Előszállás material (58 per cent), approximately identical in the Kékesd and Csákberény findings (40-38 per cents), essentially smaller in the Szebény material. (28 per cent), and merely 14 per cent in- Jutas. The proportion of the brachy- and hyperbrachycranial characters increases from Előszállás (12 per cent), Kékesd (25 per cent), Szebény (32 per cent), to Csákberény (38 per cent), but.fails to appear in Jutas. In the course of analysing the facial indices of the male skulls, it can be observed that the proportions of skulls with wide to very wide faces are nearly equal in the Kékesd, Jutas, and Előszállás materials (31, 33, 28 per cents, respectively), they are the highest in the Csákberény findings (60 per cent), but absent in the Szebény material. Male skulls with a medium wide upper face are most frequent in the Kékesd material (54 per cent), the values decreasing in the Jutas (33 per cent) and the Csákberény findings (20 per cent), and absent in the Szebény and Előszállás individuals. With respect to skulls with a narrow to very narrow faces, the highest ratio occurs in the Szebény and Előszállás skulls (100-72 per cents, respectively), followed by the Jutas, Csákberény, and Kékesd crania, with essentially smaller proportions (33, 20, 15 per cents, respectively). Concerning the upper face indices of the male skulls, the distribution of the ratios is as follows: the wide to very wide frequency is 36 per cent in Kékesd, 33 per cent in Jutas, 25 per cent in Szebény, and 20 per cent each in Csákberény and Előszállás. The medium wide upper face character is the most frequent in every Transdanubian male skull: Csákberény = 70 per cent, Jutas = 66 per cent, Kékesd = 64 per cent, Előszállás = 50 per cent, Szebény I = 37 per cent. As for the male skulls with a narrow to very narrow upper face character, none could be observed in the Kékesd and Jutas materials, then about equal in Előszállás and Szebény (30, 37 per cents, respectively), and essentially smaller in Csákberény (10 per cent). By the analysis of the distribution of the values of the main indices, it can be stated that it is the Csákberény material which stands relatively nearest to the male population of the cemetery at Kékesd. Comparing the mean values of the main measurmments of the female skulls deriving from the Transdanubia, it is found that the findings at Kékesd show the greatest similarity with the Jutas skulls with respect to the mean value of the cranial, length, and with the Szebény, Csákberény, and Előszállás materials as regards breadth. Namely, while the Kékesd and Jutas skulls are long according to their mean values and the Szebény, Csákberény, and Előszállás crania differ by their moderate lengths, the female skulls of these three latter cemeteries are narrow similarly to the Kékesd skulls, whereas those from Jutas are, on the other hand,moderately wide. The values of the cranial height and the bizygomatic breadth agree in all female series from the Transdanubia, that is, they are moderately high and moderately wide, respectively. According to the values of the measurements of the total and upper face, the Jutas and Előszállás skulls stand nearer to the Kékesd ones, since the total and upper face of the female skulls of both cemeteries are moderately high, while the upper face of the Csákberény skulls, though high similarly to the Kékesd ones, differs in the mean value of the total face measure-