The man-eaters of Tsavo and a Taita ancestral shrine. (A) Lieutenant Colonel J. H. Patterson and lion FMNH 23970 shot December 9, 1898 (16) (FMNH photo archives no. z93658, Field Museum of Natural History). (B) Articulated jaws of FMNH 23970 revealing a fractured lower right canine (and subsequent root-tip abscess), missing lower incisors, supererupted upper right incisors, and rotation and malocclusion of the upper right canine. Cranial asymmetry of 23970 occurred after injury and before death (14) (FMNH photo archives no. z94320_11c, Field Museum). (C) Lion FMNH 23969 shot December 29, 1898 (16). (D) Articulated jaws of FMNH 23969, revealing a fractured upper left carnassial with a double pulp exposure (17) (FMNH photo archives z94321_6c, Field Museum). (E) A Taita ancestral shrine photographed in 1929 by L. S. B. Leakey (22, 35). Such a shrine results from the unusual funerary practices of the Taita; after approximately 1 year of burial in a seated position, skulls are exhumed, severed, and enshrined in ancestral caves or rock shelters (25, 39).