-*/•>. 



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r/ 



A 



3 





O 



^ 





A 



r-^ 



A. Tr^cj< of 5iouy. Ind f'^Tl 

 •B. TracK of Whtte ^^-^J^.,: 



C 



V>,jSiu7dy Bofs foct^toofUf 

 C jShndeT- 7T7a7i 

 JD .Very robust m^n 



THU HUMAN I^OOTPRINTS 



The footprints of the human animal are included in this series of sketches for the pur- 

 pose of comparison. Especially interesting is the similarity to be noted between the tracks 

 made by man and those of the grizzly and the black bear (see page 608). The tracks shown 

 on the left half of this page present the moccasin-shod footprints of a Sioux Indian compared 

 with the shoe tracks of a white man. On the right are shown: (A) a woman's foot which 

 has been much pinched by tight shoes; (B) a sturdy boy's foot, somewhat too flat to be nor- 

 mal; (C) the footprint of a slender man, and (D) the imprint of a robust man's foot. 



609 



