The Anthropological Review, Volume 8Trübner and Company, 1870 |
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Page 10
... prove any proposition which he may think worth the trouble . As we have not extenuated anything , we wish to be specially careful that we set down nothing in malice , and we therefore give some passages which show the material of which ...
... prove any proposition which he may think worth the trouble . As we have not extenuated anything , we wish to be specially careful that we set down nothing in malice , and we therefore give some passages which show the material of which ...
Page 15
... proves that the temperaments are not equally liable to disease : each has its kind of health and tendency to particular diseases . This subject seems to me to deserve more attention from the directors of assurance com- panies than it ...
... proves that the temperaments are not equally liable to disease : each has its kind of health and tendency to particular diseases . This subject seems to me to deserve more attention from the directors of assurance com- panies than it ...
Page 21
... proves the tendency which exists in races , seemingly as a development of caste to separate into two or more varieties , each of which , after a time ( especially if a mountain be interposed ) harden into a coherent nationality ...
... proves the tendency which exists in races , seemingly as a development of caste to separate into two or more varieties , each of which , after a time ( especially if a mountain be interposed ) harden into a coherent nationality ...
Page 30
... prove unquestionably the affinity between different races , and are in favour of unity so far only as this affinity is of itself a proof of the unity . On the subject of mixing or crossing races , the following interesting fact is ...
... prove unquestionably the affinity between different races , and are in favour of unity so far only as this affinity is of itself a proof of the unity . On the subject of mixing or crossing races , the following interesting fact is ...
Page 36
... prove the race . The disinclination of the Malays to hard work fa- vours the immigration of Chinese . The Polynesian Archipelago cannot be easily limited , and the description of this race by external marks is difficult . The physical ...
... prove the race . The disinclination of the Malays to hard work fa- vours the immigration of Chinese . The Polynesian Archipelago cannot be easily limited , and the description of this race by external marks is difficult . The physical ...
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Common terms and phrases
American Anglo-Saxon animals Anthropological Anthropological Review appears bilious blood bones brain Britain British Britons Cæsar called Carlier cause cell Celtic Celts cent character characteristics civilisation climate colour common sources Cornish language Cornwall cranial deaths defendant Devon Devonshire doubt Dutch England English especially Europe European exist fact favour Freeman Gauls German Gildas hair head Henry of Huntingdon human immigrants Indian inhabitants intussusception Ireland Irish islands Isle of Axholme language less living look Malay matter microcephali mind moral nation native nature negro Nennius nervous Norman Conquest observations opinion organism original painting Palembang Papuans passage peculiar period persons physical physiology plaintiff plaintiff's book Polynesian population present Prichard primitive produced Professor Huxley question races reference regard remarks Retzius Roman Saxon says settlers side skin skulls Sumatra temperament Teutonic tion Virchow Welsh West Midland counties whole word