1 70 



HUMAN BIOLOGY 



Table i (Continued) 



Whites 

 (Caucasoid) 



Yellow-browns 

 (Mongoloid) 



Blacks 

 (Negroid) 



I Music highly devel- 

 I oped 



Poetry highly devel- 

 oped 



Egoism and individu- 

 ality strong 



Subject to cares and 

 worries 



Industrious 



Religious life highly 

 varied and developed 



Much subject to 

 psychoses and other 

 brain affections 



Music subdeveloped 



Poetry subdeveloped 



Egoism and individu- 

 ality less pronounced 



Less, in general, sub- 

 ject _ to cares and 

 worries 



Very industrious 



Less varied or intense 



Moderately subject to 

 psychoses and brain 

 affections 



Musical ability well 

 represented, but not 

 of high intellectual 

 order 



Poetry of low order 



Egoism and individu- 

 ality not strong 



Rather careless and 

 free from lasting 

 worries, but ridden 

 by superstitious fears 



Not very or steadily 

 industrious 



Little variety or devel- 

 opment 



Moderately subject to 

 psychoses 



MAIN SECONDARY RACIAL GROUPS 



Besides the three main racial stems, there are four large 

 and important racial groups which next demand attention. 

 They are the Austrahans, the Papuans, the Polynesians and 

 the Finno-Ugrians or Semimongoloids. 



The Australians (and related Tasmanians) are a fairly 

 well-defined race, which, according to all indications, is an 

 old derivative of the late glacial man of western Asia. 

 Notwithstanding their black color and other important 

 features their basic relation is with the white stem, though 

 in its early and primitive stages. Outside of the mixture with 

 late Papuans and further back possibly even some Negrito, 

 their hair, beard, physiognomy and even their blood are 

 closest to those of whites, particularly perhaps those of the 

 Dravidian type, though often much more primitive somatolog- 

 ically. The Tasmanians may safely be classed now as a 

 moderate variant of the Austrahans.^ 



The Papuans and related Melanesians are in all prob- 

 abihty of mixed origin. Though at present quite typical, 

 they disclose now and then features which point in two 

 main directions: to an old type such as that of the original 

 Australian, and to the Negrito. There seems to appear 

 in Melanesia also an evidently later, perhaps much more 



' (See Cat. Crania, U. S. Nat. Mus., No. 3, 1928.) 



