APPENDIX. 531 



seems to arise under the arm-pit, the nipple being actually pro 

 jected on the arm in a full-faced view of the chest. In the negress 

 the breast is more cylindrical, looser, and more flaccid, the nipple 

 being turned forward and downward, so that in a front view it is 

 projected on the chest. In the Indian the inguinal region is 

 broad and distinctly set off from the prominence of the abdomen, 

 while in the Negro it is a mere fold. As to the limbs, they are not 

 only much longer in proportion in the Negro than the Indian ; 

 their form and carriage differs also. The legs of the Indians are 

 remarkably straight, in the Negro the knees are bent in, and the hip 

 as well as knee-joint habitually flexed. Similar differences in other 

 parts of the body are visible from behind ; in the Indians the in 

 terval between the two shoulders, the shoulder-blades being com 

 paratively short in themselves, is much greater than in any other 

 race. In this respect the women do not differ from the men, but 

 share in a feature characteristic of the whole race. This peculi 

 arity is especially noticeable in a profile view of the figure, in 

 which the broad rounded shoulder marks the outline in the upper 

 part of the trunk and tapers gradually to a well-shaped arm, ter 

 minating usually in a rather small hand ; the little finger is re 

 markably short. In the Negro, on the contrary, the shoulder-blades 

 are long and placed more closely together, the shoulder being rather 

 slim and narrow, and the hand disproportionately slender, though 

 the fingers are more extensively webbed than in any other race. 

 In this respect there is little difference between male and female, 

 the build of the male being more muscular, but hardly stouter ; in 

 both, a profile view shows the back and breast projected forwards 

 and backwards of the arm. The proportions between the length 

 and width of the trunk, as compared with each other, and, measured 

 from the shoulder to the base of the trunk, hardly differ in the 

 Indian and Negro ; this renders the difference in the relative length 

 and strength of the arms and legs the more apparent. 



I need not allude to the difference of the hair ; everybody knows 

 the heavy, straight black hair of the Indian, and the wrinkled, 



