RedDwarf: You could say it's because the limb is narrower there, or that that area was not thick enough and without proper thickness taper to yield even strain along the limb. PS: For a parallel-limb bow it's better to start narrowing to the nocks at about midlimb for most such designs, Narrowing farther out adds outer limb mass with no increased safety or reduced set.
FlyinCedar: Limb width will be determined by the wood used--poplar being very wide, ipe being very narrow. Thickness always determines itself during the tillering process--at identical thickness every stave would yield a different drawweight. So decide the length bow you want, the type wood to be used, then 'design' your bow. If of a mid-density wood like oak or maple, 66" long, 50lbs at 28" then 2.5" at the fades is about right, tapering as if to a point. You can aim to a point, then during that last 2" or so stay say 3/8" wide to leave room for side nocks, or continue almost to a point and tie or glue on a tiny back nock. I prefer one with a step in it to catch the string, so the string won't rest directly on the narrow tip wood.
Brett: Good for you. A skeptic. That will save you from swallowing a lot of baloney. This is an easy thing to prove: buy a 1/4" wood slat at HomeDepot, cut it to pyramid shape, clamp the wide end, then pull on the pointed tip and watch perfect circular tiller result. This will be true if the slat in 1" wide of 1-foot wide. I learned of this in Archery The Technical Side. I wasn't so much skeptical, considering the source, as surprised. But after some thought it made sense: A point half way between point and base will feel half the leverage the base feels, so needs to be half the with to feel equal strain, etc. at any point along the limb. And this holds true for any width pyramid.
Per a few posts above, a pure pyramid is good, but not the best-performing design. The inner limb should be somewhat elliptical, to avoid near-grip set. Do this by slight thickening of a pyramid bow's near-grip wood, or letting the first one-forth or so of it's length be parallel, that portion tillered elliptically. Tim