Dr. T. Tóth szerk.: Studia historico-anthropologica (Anthropologia Hungarica 13. Budapest, 1974)
the bones of about 150 graves. The northern - and probably the bigger - part of the cemetery was completely destroyed in the course of the digging. According to the coins saved from the gravesthis cemetery was used in the first half of the Arpadian age . The village occurs only in one single document from 1265. The fields of Raazon are mentioned to border on Lök here (MÉRI' s report, 1950, MNM Adattára, 329. T.IV.). In 1951 while certifying the cemetery some more graves were opened. About 300 meters West of this cemetery from another cemetery originating from more or less the same 9 graves were excavated. Here again the majority of the graves had been destroyed by digging .Beside István MÉRI, leader of the excavation Pál LIPTÁK also took part in the work (MÉRI' s report, 1951, MNM Adattára, 329. T.IV.). Still in the same year the excavation of cemetery II. was continued by György SZABÓ. János NEMESKÉRI and György ACSÁDI also took part in the work. An additional 17 skeletons were dug up then. According to the archeologist working there the cemetery may extend northwards but further excavation was ceased as the badly preserved osteological material of the spoilt graves was not suitable for anthropological examinations, in NEMESKÉRI' s opinion (SZABÓ 's report, 1951, MNM Adattára, 329. T. IV.). MATERIAL AND METHOD Of the osteological material of the two cemeteries only that of 108 graves can be found in the Anthropological Department Hungarian Natural History Museum. 97 graves out of these derive from cemetery I, 11 from cemetery II. The low number of juveniles is remarkable. The conclusion can be drawn that juvenile skeletons were not rescued in the course of the excavation (though in the reports there is no such reference). That is the