iiKiclcratcly slioi-t-headod ; that is, brachycephals of the index 82. (i8; wliilc their luit-ai iiuk'x, 7i).()3, places them ainoiiy the meso- 

 r]iin.<; that is, neither extremel}' Ijroad nor narrow of nose. 



The I.irorrote (PI. 74), and in fact all of whom it remains to speak, can not lie recrarded with certainty as types. They are 

 too small in number. The Ijjorrote is not only widely different from all the Xeo-ilalays; he seems to approach the Caucasian too 

 mueli to he even a pure "Indonesian." He has very regular features, a skin that shows the vermillion tinge, eyes of a light brown, 

 and a considerable beard. He is, however, shorter than even the Neo-Malays of the north. On the other hand his span of arms 

 is, in proportion to his heiglit, less than theirs. 



The Manobo (PI. 75) represents the Indonesian stock of the south as the Igorrote should the same stock of the north. The 

 former is, according to the ordinary printed descriptions, a fair type, although perhaps too tall, 5 feet (i inches, far above other 

 Philippine types. His body is well proportioned. While he would be claimed by leading French anthrojjologists, as Quatrefages 

 and Hamy, and by Montano, who has thoroughly studied this peo])le, to be Caucasian in his ethnical atlinities, he is ipiite dark, darker 

 in fact than most of the Xeo-Malays. The piiintei- would call his hue that of luirnt umber, a|iproaching burnt sienna. The gen- 

 eral expression of the face reminds one in a vague way of the Caucasian type: yet his nose is short, his cheek bonc^ high- 'ind his 

 jaws and lips rather ])rojeeting. He has dark-brown eyes. His hair, although as black as a Malay's, is said to have been wavy 

 before it was cut. 



The Negrito, \'icente (iutierrez, of Hataan Province (PI. \o.7(i), would be accepted iiy the writer as an excellent type of the 

 few Negrito families that he has seen near Mariveles in that province. Yet Vicente insists that his mother is a Tagalog. The 

 same difficulty ajjplies to at least four of the five Negritos here presented. The three of Bataan stock, who appear acceptable in type, 

 claim to be mestizos; while the man from Ncgros, who insists most strenuously upon being a Negrito, is not believed by the writer 

 to have any Xegi'ito blood in bim. There is testimony, as well as ethnical evidence, to his being a native of India. He is far 

 different from any Philip|)ine type, as will be seen by considting bis photograph ( PI. SO). He is different also in color, very dark, 

 with almost a bluish tinge. 



The truer Negritos (Pis. 7(1-79), those from Bataan and Negros, pre.-ent two types. Although alike in color and hair, the 

 southern type seems taller. They are both much longer headed than the Philippine Malays and much broader in nose, two of the 

 Bataan men having noses broader than long. The color, however, is not so dark as that of the su])posed Indian of Negros, but 

 little different, in fact, from the darker brown whicli is common among the Christian Filipinos. 



