This article primarily conjoins eighteen divination inscriptions that belong to the Bin group. Sixteen of them were incised on scapulae, and the other two on tortoise plastrons. During the conjoining process, the author identified that scholars falsely conjoined these divination inscriptions in previous studies. This article demonstrates two examples of the falsely conjoined texts and explicates the relationship between them. Based on pertinent texts, this article also conjoins two divination inscriptions consisted of oracle bone fragments that were not originally bordering with one another. Because such type of assemblage remains somewhat problematic, this article elaborates on the reason of conjoining those fragments in order to make the two assemblages more rigorous and tenable.