ANTHROPOLOGY. 



643 



XVIII. — Nasal bonf, inferior width. 

 XIX. — Interorbital width. 

 XX. — ^Width of the anterior nostrils. 

 XXI. — Height from the root to the anterior nasal spine, 

 XXII. — Height from the anterior nasal spine to the alveolar pointa. 

 XXIII. — Height from the I'oot of the nose to the alveolar point. 

 XXIV. — Height from ophryon to alveolar point. 



XXV. — Height of the os malse. 

 XXVI.— Orbito-alveolar height. 

 XXVII. — Mastoido-supra auricular height. 

 XXVIII. — Auriculo-jugal distance (oblique). 

 XXIX. — Auriculo-orbital distance, right (oblique). 

 XXX. — Auriculo-orbital distance, left (oblique). 

 XXXI. — Depth of the zygomatic fosse. 

 XXXII. — Palatine vault, total maxillo-palatiue length. 

 XXXIII. — Palatine vault, anterior maxillary length. 

 XXXIV. — Palatine vault, posterior width. 

 XXIX V. — Palatine vault, Avidth to the level of the 1st molar. 

 XXXVI. — Palatine vault, width to the level of the os Incisif. 

 XXXVII. — Palatine vault, depth. 



XXXVIII. — Distance fromjthe posterior nasal spine or palatine to the basion. 

 XXXIX. — Width of the alveolar arch inwards, and maximum. 

 XL. — Width of the alveolar arch inwards and backwards. 

 XLI. — Height of the posterior nares. 

 100 XX 



XLII. — Nasal index, 

 -Facial index, 



XLIII 



XLIV. — Palatine index 



XXI 

 100 XXIV 

 IX 

 100 XXXIV. 



XXXIII 



{Bev. d'Anthrop., 1882, pp. 577-590.) 



Anthropometry is one of the youngest scions of anthropology, and it 

 not only commends itself to advanced students, but is applicable to 

 millions of subjects, and its processes are so easily understood that any 

 intelligent person may use them. As a result of greater deflniteness in 

 processes a more accurate nomenclature is demanded. An illustration 

 of this is to be seen in the following classification of stature by Pro- 

 fessor Zoja. 



