Damaged cylinder.
"Seals 463-466 have small figures forming secondary motifs beside the main scenes. All or part of the figures of these secondary motifs are reversed. Since this feature is especially common in the glyptic of the regions around Mesopotamia, it seems possible that these four seals are all peripheral products. This may account for the unusual occurrence of a god with fishes in 463, and of a god with a snake before him in 465, as well as for the rendering of the two principal figures in 466 so that they face in the same direction instead of toward each other." Porada, CANES, p. 54
Suppliant goddess and god with mace facing god who holds two fishes by a cord(?) -- In field: porcupine above small deity; monkey -- Secondary motif: above, priest facing god in ascending posture; below (all figures reversed), sitting goat beside two animals or monsters, one above other.