1366 



VARIETIES OF MANKIND. 



state, smoking tobacco and drinking ardent 

 spirits whenever they can be procured. In- 

 deed, it is well known, that among the chief 

 inducements for the native female to remain 

 with a European, are the rum and tobacco 

 with which she is supplied ad libitum. Can 

 we then wonder, if, after some years spent in 

 a manner which must militate against her 

 capabilities for procreating, more than her 

 previous rude mode of life, she returns to her 

 tribe with a broken constitution, and probably 

 past the usual term of life for conception (they 

 seldom bear children after thirty years of age) 

 to prove in such instances sterile?"* 



The same explanation is probably appli- 

 cable to the case of the other Aboriginal 

 races adverted to by Count Strzelecki ; and, 

 if it be the correct representation of facts, it 

 altogether destroys the force of any argument 

 which might be raised upon the infertility of 

 the native females after having borne children 

 to Europeans, in favour of the specific differ- 

 ence of the races.] 



BIBLIOGRAPHY. For the facts of the latter "part 

 of this article, the author has relied in great part on 

 the learned and elaborate treatises of Dr. Prictiard , 

 whose " Researches into the Physical History of 

 Mankind" (3rd edit, London, 1836-1847), will long 

 hold its rank as a most complete and masterly 

 treatise on Ethnology. His smaller work, " The 

 Natural History of Man " (London, 1848), though 

 chiefly an abridgement of the preceding, contains in 

 its supplement some additional information of value. 

 The author has also derived much assistance from 

 Dr. Latham's more recent treatise, " Natural History 

 of the Varieties of Man," (London, 1850). A large 

 part of the materials of the earlier portion of the 

 article, however, have been drawn direct from 

 original sources. 



The Bibliography of the subject, to be complete, 

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 Voyage Pittoresque autour du Monde, Paris 



* Edinburgh Monthly Journal, October 1851. 



18211822. Clapperton Denham, Travels in 

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 and the Transactions of the Ethnological Society of 

 New York. Grey, Journal of Discoveries in Aus- 

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 their Geographical Distribution, London, 1849. 

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 London, 1831. Quetelet, Sur PHomme et le Deve- 

 loppement de ses Faculte's, Paris, 1835. Quay et 

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 1'Astrolabe, Paris, 18291834. Kilter, Die Erd- 

 kunde im Verhaltniss zur Natur mid zur Geschichte 

 der Menschen, oder allgemeine vergleichende Ge'o- 

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 TabuliB Craniorum diversarum Nationum, Lugd. 



