The circular tripod vessel (Plate XXI) described below, the property of Mrs. J.Worth by whose kind permission it is here published, was acquired by her late husband, Colonel J. G. Worth, at Ur, while he was serving as A.D.C. (Lieutenant) to General Loch in Iraq. Some doubt might be thought to exist of the correctness of this provenance in view of the fact that Colonel Worth had previously served for some years in Aden, but Mrs. Worth positively states that the vessel came from Ur. The possibility of such a provenance makes it worth presenting here.
The vessel, ht. 5·6 × diam. 9·15 cm., stands on three stylised animal's feet, which have grooves filed in the outer edge to simulate four toes on each (part is chipped away on two of the feet). The bases of the feet have filed cross grooves, and the lower outside edge of the bowl has a filed tooth ornament. The inside of the bowl, depth 3·1 cm., has concentric striations from grinding. The outer wall of the bowl has two protruding ridges demarcating a band in which are incised the names ‘mkhl ḥm in the South Arabian alphabet (Fig. 1). The lower cross stroke of the ms is horizontal, and in the case of the first, coincides with, though it slightly deepens, the groove defining the upper edge of the lower bounding ridge.