THE 



NATURAL HISTORY REVIEW 



A 



QUARTERLY JOURNAL OF BIOLOGICAL SCIENCE. 



%ev'HW^. 



XXXIII. 



1. BeEICHT tJBER DIE ZUSAMMENKUNFT EINIGER AnTHROPOLOGEK, 



in September 1861, iu Grottingen. Leipzig, 1861. 



2. ZuR MoRPHOLOGiE DER Eassen-Sch:u)el. Voii Dr. J. C. G. 



Lucce. Frankfurt, 1861. 



3. The Mensuration of the Human Skull. By J. Aitkin Meigs, 



M.D. Philadelplaia, 1861. 



4. Le Kephalographe. Nouvel Instrument destine a determiner 



la Figure et les Dimensions du Crane ou de la Tete Humaine. 

 Par P. Hartiug. Utrecht, 1861. 



5. EssAi suR LES Deformations Artificielles du Crane. Par 



L. A. Gosse. Paris, 1855. 



6. Craniometrie of onderzoek van den Mensohelijken Schedel 



BiJ verschillende Volken, in Vergelijking met dien tan 

 DEN Orang Oetan. Door J. A. Kool. Amsterdam, 1852. 



7. Untersuchungen uber Schadelformen. Von Dr. Joseph En- 



gel. Prague, 1851, 



8. Observations on the Human Crania contained iu tlie Museum 



of the Army Medical Department, Fort Pitt, Chatham. Crania 

 Britannica. By J. Thurnam and J. B. Davis, 1858-62. 



[With Plate VHI.] 



The above long list of comparatively recent works, chiefly on 

 the subject of Craniometry, or on the various modes in which the 

 dimensions, proportions, and form of the Human Cranium may be 

 estimated and defined, and to which numerous additions of prior 

 date might be made, will alone suffice to show, how much im- 

 portance is now deservedly attached to this branch of Comparative 

 Anthropology. A term, first proposed, we believe, by the illus- 

 N. H. R.— 1862. 2B 



