PICTURESQUE YUNNAN; TYPES OF CHINESE AND 

 NATIVE RACES; PAGODAS, AND TOMBS' 



DUOTONES FROM PHOTOGRAPHS BY YVETTE BORUP ANDREWS 



The Asiatic Zoological Expedition of the American Museum, 1916-1917, under the leadership of Mr. Roy C. Andrews, 



tforked in remote parts of the province of Yunnan, China, where no wliite man had been before. It brought 



back to New York a record of the country, the people, and of the work of the expedition, 



in the shape of 10,000 feet of moticni picture film, \'>0 Paget natural 



color plates, and 400 black and white negatives 



THE GATE OF CHOU-CHOU 



All of the first and second class cities in Yunnan are surrounded by high walls, and are entered through four 



or more picturesque gates. Some of the walls probably were built in the Middle Ages, and are still 



in a fairly good state of preservation. They are all loopholcd for riflemen or archers, and 



even today offer a formidable defense, except against artillery. The gates, like the 



temples, almost always are surmounted by dolphins 



' Illustrations and text, together with the preceding article, copyrighted, 1917, 

 by tlie American Museum Journal 



525 



