.bk A16 .fl ZK226yM.j .fd item description .ed ZK226 .ei yM .rd ZC315 .ri yM i 27 ds torso of a female figurine. Head and arms are broken off. Left shoulder and left breast are preserved. Breasts are applied, and there are traces of marks on the torso below the breast. Probably these are the traces of the hands that were placed on the torso below the breasts as if holding the breasts. The neck is thick, and the body is robust and thick, and the waist is not slimmed down to give a feminine appearance. The figurine is not very smooth, nor very well executed. i 116 ds fragment of a human female figurine. Only the chest, part of the neck and a small part of the right arm are preserved. The preserved part of the arm indicates that it was extending outwards. The breasts are applied and round shaped, with pointed tips. On both shoulders, we can see a necklace made from round pieces of clay shaped like beads. They are more visible on the right shoulder. The necklace extends all the way to the middle of the back (flat no beads) serving as a counter weight. There is a small perforation in the middle of the neck section (not clear if the perforation continues all the way down, nor if it is intentional or caused by damage). i 129 ds fragment of an anthropomorphic figurine. It might have been photographed upside down and what we can see here as the top part is actually the bottom half. If we assume that this is the upper half, we do not have a view that shows the area between the two knobs in order to see if there is a breakage where the head is supposed to be. Moreover, the smoothness of the edges and the little depression between the two knobs suggests that there is no breakage, hence what we have is the bottom half. The two knobs are flattened but then the body starts getting thicker, taking a rectangular flat shape with no markings or indicators. q 625.3 ds portion of the bottom half of a plaque bearing a female representation on it. The preserved portion shows the thighs which are depicted separated, and shaped to make the hip area in the shape of an hour glass. The pubic triangle is depicted as an incised triangle with small incised lines inside it to schematically represent the pubic hair. The plaque is broken below the knee area of the figure. q 638.3 ds bottom portion of a plaque bearing a female figure. The hips are accentuated giving a silhouette of an hour glass. There is a gap between the thighs. The figurine is decorated with reddish paint on the waist with one horizontal line and four vertical line dripping from it like tassels. The feet are flat and project forward by 1.5 cm, and they are painted as well. One of the preserved sides of the plaque is decorated with horizontal lines of the same paint. The pubis is depicted by a vertical slit, with thin vertical paint stripes on each side, giving the shape of a vagina.