The Anthropological Review, Volume 2; Volume 5Trübner and Company, 1864 |
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Page 2
... seen in transverse sections ; and such there is also in the relative volume , the disposition and the con- tents of the medullary canal , which may even be absent . These characters can only be studied by the aid of the microscope . I ...
... seen in transverse sections ; and such there is also in the relative volume , the disposition and the con- tents of the medullary canal , which may even be absent . These characters can only be studied by the aid of the microscope . I ...
Page 3
Anthropological Society of London. II . THE EXTERNAL CHARACTERS OF HUMAN HAIR AS SEEN BY THE NAKED EYE . The hair of the races of man presents , at first sight , very striking peculiarities in regard to its length , abundance , colour ...
Anthropological Society of London. II . THE EXTERNAL CHARACTERS OF HUMAN HAIR AS SEEN BY THE NAKED EYE . The hair of the races of man presents , at first sight , very striking peculiarities in regard to its length , abundance , colour ...
Page 4
... seen all kinds of shades , from a fiery red to a silvery white , produced by these means . Just as originally dark hair may become discoloured by such means , so may it , vice versa , appear black , as I found in a wig from the Fiji ...
... seen all kinds of shades , from a fiery red to a silvery white , produced by these means . Just as originally dark hair may become discoloured by such means , so may it , vice versa , appear black , as I found in a wig from the Fiji ...
Page 5
... seen that the same colour - black , for instance - is the appanage of almost all the great groups of mankind , and that all shades may be met with in one and the same race . It is this last circumstance which must be taken in account in ...
... seen that the same colour - black , for instance - is the appanage of almost all the great groups of mankind , and that all shades may be met with in one and the same race . It is this last circumstance which must be taken in account in ...
Page 7
... seen such roots in desiccated hair torn from their follicles . At the beginning of my researches , I felt inclined to consider the variations in the form of the root as race peculiarities ; but , on extend- ing my observations to a ...
... seen such roots in desiccated hair torn from their follicles . At the beginning of my researches , I felt inclined to consider the variations in the form of the root as race peculiarities ; but , on extend- ing my observations to a ...
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Africa America amongst anatomy ancient animals Anthropological ANTHROPOLOGICAL REVIEW Anthropological Society antiquity appears Arabs Aryan Aryan race assert bones Boudin Broca bronze called Carter Blake Celt Celtic central spot character chimpanzee Christian civilisation climate colour consanguineous consanguineous marriages consider cousins Crawfurd deaf-mutes Diameters distinct doubt Egypt Egyptian ethnology Europe European existence facts gorilla Guanche hair human races idea Indian individual influence inhabitants instinct islands James Hunt Jews John Crawfurd language mankind marriages medullary substance ment mind Miscegenation monogenists moral mulatto nations native nature Neanderthal Negro objects observed opinion origin paper Paul Broca peculiar period Phrenology present produced Professor Bain proved question regards remarkable result savage scientific sections skull slavery slaves Society of London Society of Paris species specimens Tharros theory tion tribes Waitz whilst word