258 The Tinguian 



comes to a similar conclusion from a study of the results obtained by 

 many observers. 



Girard gives the following measurements for 25 males of 

 Kwang-si : 



Range Average 



Height, standing meters 1.528 to 1.748 1.616 



Length of head " .1815 



Breadth of head " .1435 



Height of head " .1270 



Length of nose " .04648 



Breadth of nose " .03876 



Cephalic index 73. to 85. 79-52 



Length-Height index 69.9 



Breadth-Height index 88.5 



Nasal index 67. to 95. 82.98 



Deniker (p. 578) gives the average height of 15,582 males, mostly 

 Hakka of Kwang-tung, as 1.622. The cephalic index of 61 living 

 subjects and 84 crania, principally from Canton, he finds to be — 

 Living 81.2; crania 78.2. 



Martin 1 presents the following data: Average height of males 

 — 1. 614; average height of females — 1.498. Cephalic index (49 

 males) — 81.8. Length-Height index (49 males) — 66.5. Nasal index 

 (49 males) — J J. J . 2 



SOUTH PERAK MALAY 3 



Observations by Annandale and Robinson (Fasciculi 



Malayenses, pt. 1, pp. 105 et seq., London, 1903). 



37 males Range Average 



Height, standing meters 1.488 to 1.763 1.594 



Length of head " .173 to .198 .182 



Breadth of head ^ " .141 to .162 .149 



Height of head (tragus to vertex) " .119 to .146 .135 



Breadth of zygomatic arches " .120 to .150 .139 



Length of nose " .0413 to .0525 .0477 



Breadth of nose " .0337 to .0437 .0358 



Cephalic index 82.3 



Length-Height index 73.9 



Nasal index 81.2 



1 Martin, Inlandstamme der Malayischen Halbinsel, pp. 237, 351, 358, 386 

 (Jena, 1005). 



8 For measurements on the Northern Chinese and the Formosa Chinese see 

 Koganei, Messungen an chinesischen Soldaten (Mitt. med. Fak. k. japan. Univ. 

 Tokio, 1903, Vol. VI, No. 2), und Messungen an mannlichen Chinesen- 

 Schadeln (Internat. Centralblatt fur Anthropologic, 1902, pp. 129, et seq.). 



3 For other observations on Malaysia, in general, see Annandale and Rob- 

 inson (Jour. Anth. Inst., Vol. XXXII, 1902) ; Keane, Ethnology (Cambridge, 

 1907) ; Duckworth (Jour. Anth. Inst., Vol. XXXII) ; Hose and McDougall 

 (The Pagan Tribes of Borneo, Vol. II, pp. 311, et seq.) give results by Haddon; 

 Hamy (L'Anthropo}ogie, Vol. VII, Paris, 1896) ; Hagen, Anthropologische 

 Studien aus Insulinde (Amsterdam, 1800) ; Sullivan, Racial Types in the Phil- 

 ippine Islands (Anth. Papers, American Museum of Nat. Hist., Vol. XIII, 

 pt. I, New York, iqi8). 



