PHYSICAL ETHNOLOGY. 

 Table VI.— Continued. 



255 



Tribe. 



Nauuikeag . 



...do 



Assinuboine 



...do 



Mandan, F. 

 ...do...F. 



Ricari 



Miuf^o 



Menominee . 



...do 



...do 



Minetari, F . 



Mean.. 



L. D. 



7.4 



(i.9 

 7.6 

 7.-5 

 7.1 

 7.0 

 7.0 

 7.1 

 7.1 

 7.1 

 l.h 

 7.3 



7.24 



p. D. 



5.0 

 5.8 

 5.7 

 5.4 

 5.3 

 .5.2 

 5.5 

 5.8 

 5.4 

 5.4 

 4.4 



.47 



F. D. 



4.4 

 4.2 



4.6 

 4.4 

 4.3 

 4.1 

 4.1 

 4.5 

 4.1 

 3.9 

 4.0 

 4.4 



4.36 



V. D. 



5.9 

 5.3 

 5.1 

 5.2 

 5.1 

 5.3 

 5.1 

 5.2 

 5.5 

 5.? 

 5.5 

 5.1 



5.42 



1.5.0 

 14.3 

 14.9 

 14.7 

 14.2 

 13.9 

 13.5 

 14.7 

 14.7 

 13.3 

 14.5 

 14.1 



14.67 



4.3 

 3.9 

 4.3 

 4.6 

 3.8 

 4.2 

 4.0 

 4.1 

 4.0 

 4.4 

 4.2 

 4.1 



4.23 



14.0 

 14.4 

 14.9 

 14.7 

 14.6 

 14.1 

 14.0 

 14.5 



14.7 



14.62 



19.8 

 21.2 

 20.8 

 20.0 

 19.8 

 19.5 

 20.2 

 20.3 

 19.3 

 20.6 

 20.2 



20.^ 



Table VII.— AMERICAN BRACHYCEPHALIC CRANIA. 



Tribe. 



L. D. P. D. 



Muskogee. 

 ....do 



Uchee 



Miusi 



Nalic'k 



...do 



Dacota 



....do 



Pawnee, F. 



....do 



....do 



...do 



Chetimachee 

 Chimuyan . . 



Osage 



....do 



Creek . .. 

 Choctaw . 

 ...do.... 



"Ohio Mound," F 



Goajiro 



....(io 



6.8 

 6.6 

 6.8 

 6.7 

 6.7 

 6.7 

 6.7 

 6.8 

 6.6 

 6.6 

 6.5 

 6.7 

 6.5 

 6.5 

 6.6 

 6.5 

 6.9 

 6.5 

 6.4 

 6.4 

 6.7 

 6.5 



Mean 6.62 



0.0 



5.7 

 5.4 

 5.0 

 5.2 

 5.2 

 5.7 

 5.7 

 5.4 

 5.5 

 5.5 

 5.6 

 5.7 

 5.4 

 5.7 

 5.9 

 .5.7 

 5.1 

 5.1 

 5.3 

 5.3 

 5.1 



4.2 

 4.5 

 4.3 

 4.2 

 4.1 

 4.3 

 4.2 

 4.3 

 4.4 

 4.1 

 4.0 

 4.3 

 4.3 

 4.2 

 4.3 

 4.6 

 4.6 

 4.0 

 4.0 

 3.9 



5.6 

 5.3 

 5.5 

 5.3 

 5.7 

 5.3 

 5.4 

 5.5 

 4.9 

 5.4 

 5.4 

 5.5 

 5.9 

 5.2 

 5.2 

 5.3 

 5.4 

 4.7 

 5.1 

 5.0 

 5.2 

 4.9 



5.45 



4.24 j 5.30 



15.4 

 15.3 

 15.0 

 14.0 

 14.5 

 14.2 

 14.7 

 15.1 

 13.7 

 15.0 

 14.8 

 15.1 

 15.5 

 14.3 

 14.8 

 15.1 

 1.5.5 

 12.5 

 14.0 

 14.2 



14.63 



4.3 

 4.5 

 4.4 

 4.1 

 4.1 

 3.9 

 4.4 

 4.4 

 4.3 

 4.4 

 4.4 

 4.4 

 4.1 

 3.8 

 4.7 

 4.1 

 4.7 

 4.1 

 4.0 

 4.0 



15.0 

 14.0 

 14.3 

 13.8 

 14.3 

 14.1 

 13.5 

 14.4 

 13.0 

 14.0 

 14.1 

 14.2 

 14.0 

 13.4 

 13.8 

 13.4 

 14.4 

 13.0 



13.4 



13.0 



13.85 



20.0 

 20.4 

 20.1 

 19.3 

 19.0 

 19.1 

 19.8 

 20.1 

 19.1 

 19.5 

 19.3 

 19.6 

 19.1 

 18.8 

 19.5 

 19.5 

 20.4 

 18.7 

 19.7 

 19.0 

 19.3 

 18.5 



19.44 



But I noAV turn to the region around the northern lakes, where opportunities 

 of personal observation first suggested to me the obvious discrepancies between 

 the actual evidence disclosed by exhumation on the sites of native sepulture, 

 and the theory of a typical unity manifested in the physical and peculiar cranial 

 characteristics of the most widely-separated tribes and nations of the American 

 continent. The Scioto IMouud skull, characterized by Dr. Morton as " the per- 

 fect type of Indian confonnatiorl to which the skulls of all the tribes from Cape 

 Horn to Canada more or less approximate," presents the remarkable anterior 

 development of a cranium whereof two-thu'ds of the cerebral mass was in front 



