1880.] 



on Fashion in Deformity. 



403 



tlioy mostly pass insensibly into ono another, and vary according as 

 the iuteutiou has been carried out with a greater or less degree of per- 



FiG. 10. 



Posterior view of Cranium, deformed according to the fashion of flattening, with 

 compensatory lateral widening. (Mus. Roy. Coll. Surgeons.) 



Fig. 11. 



Cranium of Koskeemo Indian, Vancouver Island, deformed by circular constriction 

 and elongation (Mus. Roy. Coll. Surgeons.) 



severance and skill, it is not easy to do so. Besides the simple occi- 

 pital and the simple frontal compressions, all th^ others may be 

 grouped into two principal divisions. First (Figs 8 and 9), that in 



2 E 2 



