16 



INTRODUCTION. 



2. Toliecan Race. 



a. Peruvian Family. 



Aricans 



Pachacamac 



Pisco 



Santa 



Lima 



Callao 



Miscellaneous 



Elong;ated skulls from Titicaca, 

 &c 



h. Mexican Family. 



Ancient Mexicans 



Modern Mexicans 



Lipans 



V. Negro Group. 

 1. American horn, 

 2, Native Africans, 

 3, Hovas, 



20 

 104 



62 

 8 

 1 

 3 

 9 



221 



. 24 

 . 9 

 . 2 



35 



16 



88 



2 



4. Alforian Race. 



Australians 11 



Oceanic Negroes 2 



119 



VI. Mixed Races. 



Copts 5 



Negroid Egyptians 12. 



Nubians 4 



Hispano-Peruvians 2 



Negroid-Indians 3 



Hispano-Indian 1 



Malayo-Chinese 1 



Mulattoes 2 



30 



VII. Lunatics and Idiots, 18 



VIII. Illustrative of Growth, 7 



Phrenological Skulls, 2 



Nation uncertain, 1 1 



Total, *1035 



The letters F. A. express ihQ facial angle, and I. C. refer to the inter- 

 nal capacity of the cranium as obtained by the process invented by my 

 friend, Mr. J. S. Phillips, and described in my Crania Americana, p. 263, 

 merely substituting leaden shot, one-eighth of an inch in diameter, in place 

 of the white mustard-seed originally used. I thus obtain the absolute 

 capacity of the cranium, or hulk of the brain, in cubic inches; and the 

 results are annexed in all other instances in which I have had leisure to 

 put this revised mode of measurement in practice. I have restricted it, 

 at least for the purpose of my inferential conclusions, to the crania of 

 persons of sixteen years of age and upwards, at which period the brain is 

 believed to possess the adult size. Under this age, the capacity-measure- 

 ment has only been resorted to for the purpose of collateral comparison. 



All the measurements in this Catalogue, both of the facial angle and 

 internal capacity, have been made with my own hands. I at one time 

 employed a person to aid me in these elaborate and fatiguing details ; but 

 having detected some errors in his measurements, I have been at the 

 pains to revise all that part of the series that had not been previously 

 measured by myself. I can now, therefore, vouch for the accuracy of 

 these multitudinous data, which I cannot but regard as a novel and im- 

 portant contribution to Ethnological science. 



It is necessary to add, that the measurements originally published in 



* There is a discrepancy between this total and the highest number in the Catalogue 

 itself, owing to certain numbers having been cancelled, and not refilled. 



