478 PHYSIOLOGICAL SRRIK>. 



D. 695. A cast of the cavity of Dean Swift's skull. 

 D. 696. Two c;ists of tlu cranial cavity of a Chinaman. 



D. 697. Two casts of the cranial cavity of a Tartar (male). 



This is so extraordinarily broad that the outline is almost 

 circular. 



D. 698. Two casts of the cranial cavity of a Turk. 

 This also is very broad. 



D. 699. A human brain labelled " New Zealand." 0. C. 13,'V.) n. 

 D. 700. Two casts of the cranial cavity of a Maori (male). 

 D. 701. Two casts of the cranial cavity of an Australian (male). 

 D. 702. Two casts of the cranial cavity of an Australian (male). 



D. 703. Two casts of the cranial cavity of an Australian (male). 



The first two of these casts (D. 701, D. 702) aiv remark- 



able by reason of their extreme narrowness, especially in 



the frontal region. The third (D. 703), however, is quite 



broad. 



D. 704. A cast of the interior of a narrow skull. 



This cast was made, at the instance of the late Profes-or 

 Huxley, from a skull (probably of an Australian) to 

 contrast with that of a Tartar (specimen I). (>D7) so as to 

 demonstrate the extreme variations in the form of the 

 cranial cavity, and consequently of the brain, in different 

 racefl of mankind. Prwiifrtl />>/ Professor ////.*//;/. 



Huxley, Journ.of Anat. & Phys. vol. i. 1SC.7, p. Co. 



D. 705. A cast of the cranial cavity of a Papuan. 



D. 706. The brain of a yotin^ female " Hushman." from which 

 the left cerebral hemisphere lias been removed. 



This specimen has been de-erilied in detail by Professor 

 John Marshall (Phil. Trans. 1864, pp. 501-525;. He 



