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Miscellanea Anthropologica.

The Kirkhead Cave, near Ulverstone. [Extract of letter from Capt. Barrie, R.N., Swarthdale, Westmorland, 15th Sept., to W. Bollaert.] "I went yesterday with a party to grub in the soil of a cavern at Kirkhead, near Ulverstone, of which some notice has appeared in the Anthropological Journal. We found several bones of fowls and some of recent animals, all the marrow-bones broken. Only one human relic, part of the tibia of a small, but adult, man or woman. There is an immense quantity of mud in the cave, and the explorers have not reached the true bottom yet. The stuff that has been thrown out has nearly choked the mouth; so that to have fair play at it, you would require the services of half a dozen navvies to clear away the rubbish. I have seen bones of badger, rat, wild cat, wild pig, goat, goose, etc., also a bone bored through the side, as if for wearing for an ornament, a piece of the rudest pottery bearing marks of the hand on the inside, and a Roman coin: the latter was found close to the surface. There are no marks at present of any stream having flowed either in or out; but in the cave district of Yorkshire it is very common for these subterranean drains to change their course. Much more may be found with hard work; but the season is now so late, that I doubt whether another party will be got up."

Human Hybridity.

88, Cambridge Street, Pimlico, August 27th, 1864.

Sir, With respect to the question of the existence of half-breeds between Englishmen and the natives of Australia, whose frequency has been denied in the strongest terms by M. Broca, I should like to call attention to the following passage taken from a book entitled Reminiscences of Thirty-one Years' Residence in New South Wales and Victoria, by R. Therry, late one of the judges of the Supreme Court of New South Wales. London, second edition, 1863, p. 293. "Even the half-caste natural children of convicts and native women, some of the male portion of which class, on arriving at the prescribed age, are now, under manhood suffrage qualification, registered on the electoral roll of the New South Wales constituency, evince a tendency to prefer a savage to a civilised life.”

This testimony seems both undeniable and decisive; and we see how it is these half-breeds have no special nick-name, a point on which M. Broca lays great stress. Being generally of convict blood, they are included in that class, as thereby already sufficiently distinguished from the free emigrant.

I am yours, etc., T. BENDYSHE.

INDEX.

Abbeville, the fossil man of, again, 220 | Cambodia, Bastian on the ethnology of,

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British Association, Anthropology at, Daubeny on the decay of species, 301

A.D. 1864, 294

Broca's Hybridity, 164, 344

Bruniquel, cave of, Owen on, 226

Burton, Richd. F., notes on scalping, 49
notes on Waitz's An-

thropology, 233

335

Doherty, Dr., organic philosophy, 213
Doyle's Chronicle of England, 209

Egyptian race, Poole on the ethnic re-
lations of the, 323

mission to Dahome, Ethnology and phrenology as an aid to
the biographer, 126

VOL. II-NO. VII.

A A

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Levy, on twins, 232

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Peyrerius, and theological criticism, 109
Phenomena of Hybridity, 164
"Philalethes" on Peyrerius, and theo.
gical criticism, 109

on the distinction between
man and animals, 153
Phrenology (Ethnology and) as an aid
to the biographer, 126
Poole, R. S., on the ethnic relations of
the Egyptian race, 323

Pott, on the myths of the origin of
man and of language, 24

Phillips, Professor, on the measure-
ment of time by natural chronome-
ter, 312

Prehistoric dwellings, Roberts on, 151
Prize anthropological memoir, 223
Pruner-Bey, on the human hair as a
race character, 1

145

on the Neanderthal skull,

Limerick, human remains in Lough Psychical difference between man and

Gur, 59

Lindemann, on primary stocks of man,
228

origin and mental agents

of man, 228
diversities of mankind, 228
Lyell, Sir Charles, the inaugural ad-
dress of, 299

brute, 229

Quadrumana, Crisp on the anatomy of,
308

Reade, W. Winwood, Savage Africa, 123

Reade, W. Winwood, on Burton's mis- Thomson, "not man, but man-like,"

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Savage Africa, 123
Scalping, notes on, by R. F. Burton, 49
Schaller, J., on body and soul, 63, 230
Scytho-Cimmerian language, 39
Senses and the Intellect, Bain on, 250
Shemitic nations, Renan on the, 52
Showers, Lieutenant-Colonel, on the
Meenas of Central India, 327
Slavery, by James Reddie, 280
Species, on the decay of, 301
Steps, proportion of male to female, 227
Stocks of man, primary, 228

Stone and bronze ages, Crawfurd on,313

147

Thoughts and facts contributing to the
history of man, 173

Time, Phillips on the measurement of,
312

Turcoman tribes of Central Asia, Vam-
béry on the, 326

Turner, Dr. William, on Cranial de-
formities, 323

Twins, Levy on, 232

Type, Farrar on the fixity of, 302

Vambéry on the Turcoman tribes of
Central Asia, 326

Waitz's Anthropology, Burton's notes
on, 233

Wallace, Alfred R., on the progress of
civilisation in Northern Celebes, 332
Wrist, on the abnormal distortion of, 59

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