DESCRIPTION OF FIGURES OF SKULLS. 577 



its cubical capacity taken ; a male brachy-cephalie skull (Goodman- 

 ham, No. xcviii, p. 305)^ however, of striking-ly similar contour in 

 its smaller as well as its larger outlines to this, which belonged to 

 an individual about 5" taller than the owner of the skull here de- 

 scribed, exceeds its cubic capacity by only 10 cubic inches. The 

 cubic capacity of the Flixton female skull being 90*5 inches, is 

 somewhat larger than" that (1484*23 cub. cent. = 90-276 cub. inches) 

 found by Professor Broca to be the average of 90 Parisian skulls, 

 presumably of both sexes, of the present century, ' qui provenaient 

 tons des sepultures particulieres.' See Memoires d' Anthropologic, 

 i. pp. 354, 355, 1871 ; or Bull. Soe. Anthr. de Paris, vol. ii. Ser. i. 

 p. 510. 



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