I personally find that bow very rough looking. It has square edges, untidy tips, criss-cross sinew with loose ends, and scatter marks on the belly. I'm not sure if that contributed to the break, but that bow looked like a bow in the making, not nearly ready to be drawn more than a few inches. "The sooner it looks like a bow, the sooner it acts like a bow" is a famous phrase. This bow did not yet look like a bow much.
That being said, that is very weird break. Not a typical compression chrysal at all. Does the bow show signs of any other compression failures? Any more chrysals? I think this almost looks like as if the curing sinew pulled the bow into reflex, where the belly just gave way because it couldn't handle the tension. I can see a small knot about an inch to the right of that break. Since the bow is made from a very small diameter sapling with the pith of the tree still in the bow limb, such a small knot would span the entire width of the bow's belly. It's not uncommon to see a compression fracture around such knots that span a large area on the belly of a bow. But this break appears to be an inch away from the knot. Or is there also a knot at the break?