THE ESKIMO RACK AND LANGUAGE. 285 



Eskimo and the Lapps, thinks tha: '• if these peoples were originally 

 one, the Es inio have remained far truer to the type of tlie men of 

 the oldest stone age," and that " Prof. Dawkins is so far justified 

 in affiliating or at least comparing the first known inhabitants of 

 Europe, the men of the caves, not with the Lapps, but with the 

 Eskimo." Sir Daniel Wilson^ is of opinion that " it is impossible to 

 look on casts of the large and finely developed Cro-Magnon skull 

 now in my possesion, without being struck with the extreme contrast 

 between them and the Eskimo." And the height of the Cro-magnon 

 niau has been held to b t an objection to Prof. Dawkins' view. But 

 tlie Cro-magnon sijeciraen is probably an exaggerated one, just as we 

 find a considei-able difierence between the Kskimo of the extreme 

 West and East in height and other respects, the truth being most 

 jtrobably as Dr. Mrtttei'- observes, "Quant a la taille de ces hommes 

 ])rimitifs, elle etait petite ou moyenn(!, quoique le squelette de Cro- 

 M ignon off"re ua exemple de taille assez elev^a." Rolleston^ concludes 

 an article on the Prehistoric Crania of Britain in the following words, 

 "Thei'e are many reasons for supposinir that the Eskimo are a race 

 which still retains and preserves for us, in the structure and gram- 

 tical peculiai'ities of its language, its life history, and physical peculi- 

 arities, the vary dosp.st likeness to what we believe some of the 

 earliest races of mankind must have been." M. Mortillet * considers 

 that the Greeulanelers are descended from the. men whose remains of 

 the pahieolithic epoch are found at La Madelaine in France, agreeing 

 with Prof. Dawkins. Rolleston ^"^ and Broca" have noted the corres- 

 pondence of I he Eskimo nasal index to that of prehistoric European 

 skulls, and Cieland ^ and Rolleston * have called attention to the 

 elongation of the basicranial axis. Prof. E. D. Cope ** accounts for 

 appearance of tritubercular molars iu certain Western Eui'opean races, 

 by reference to the theory of Prof. Body Dawkins, as such dentition 



1. Add. of Sir Daniel Wilson, LL.D., Vice-Pres. Sec. H. Am. Ass. Adv. Sci., Montreal, 1882, 



p. 532. See also "the fancy of an Eskimo pedigree for European Palaeolithic Man.'' 

 Proc. and Trans. Roy. Assoc, of Canada, Vol. I. (1882-3) p. .57. 



2. Les anciens peuples de I'Europe centrale. Mem. de la Soc. d'Anthr. de Paris II. Ser. T. 1. 



3. Scientific Papers. (Ed. by Turner, 1S84) Vol. I. p. 320. fp. 431. 



4. Les Groenlandais descendants des .Magdaleniens. Soc. d'Anthr. de Paris, 18S.n. pp. 86S-8T(i. 



5. Loc. cit. p. 11. 



6. Revue d'Anthrop. 1873. II. p. 191. 



7. Philosophical Transactions, 1870, p. 124. 



8. Loc. cit. p. 191. 



9. On Lemurine Reversion in Human Dentition, Amer. Nat., Nov. 1886. p. 947. 



