igi5.] C. B. Kloss : Measurements of Sungkat Sakai. 



83 



NOTE. 



The tribe whose measurements are recorded in the fore- 

 going pages have also been measured by Messrs. Annandale 

 and Robinson, whose figures are given in detail in ** Fasciculi 

 Malayenses, Anthropology," Part i, pp. 105-149 (1903). As 

 the measurements have been taken, which one exception, in 

 precisely the same manner the results obtained are here given 

 for comparative purposes, while in the third column both 

 series have been combined, the number of observations, viz., 

 78, representing a very appreciable fraction of the total adult 

 males of the tribe. 



It will be noted that in those measurements that admit of 

 a high degree of accuracy such as the length and breadth of 

 the head and the length and breadth of the face, the two 

 series show very close approximation, while in others, such 

 as the height of the head from vertex to tragus, which are more 

 difficult measurements to take, a considerable amount of diver^ 

 ence is exhibited. 



The difference of bigonial breadths is due to the fact that 

 in one instance an attempt was made to give the bony breadth 

 of the face and in the other the fleshy breadth was recorded. 



H.C.R. 



