DERIVED FROM ANATOMY, HISTORY, AND THE MONUMENTS. 109 
Fig. 1. (Cat. 864.) A female cranium, of a narrow oval form, with a low, receding 
forehead, small nose, and protruding face. There is much of the Negro ezpression in the 
bony structure of this head.—I. C .77 cubic inches. F. A. 75°. 
Fig. 2. (Cat. 858.) A large and rather ponderous cranium, with a well developed 
forehead, salient nose, jaws powerfully developed and protruding, and the upper teeth 
presenting obliquely outwards.—I. C. 87 cubic inches. F, A. 77°. 
Fig. 3. (Cat. 885.) An oval head, with a convex frontal region, small, depressed 
nose, and very projecting face.—I. C. 77 cubic inches. F. A. 76°. 
Fig. 4. (Cat. 852.) A small head, with a low, receding forehead, and strong, small 
nose, projecting maxille, and obvious Negro expression. A little hair remained, which 
was cut short, and was coarse without being woolly.—I. C. 77 cubic inches. F. A. 75°. 
Fig. 5. (Cat. 869.) An oval head, with a good frontal development, salient nose, and 
very projecting face.—I. C. 88 cubic inches. F. A. 76°. 
In the preceding five crania, the Negro features and expression greatly predominate ; 
at the same time there is an evident mixture of Caucasian characters. Two of them 
might pass, perhaps, for genuine Negroes, but for the comparatively fine texture of the 
hair. I therefore regard them as Mulattoes, to which class, also, may be referred a large 
proportion of the modern Corts. 
(Cat. No. 1044.) 'The subjoined wood-cut illustrates a remarkable head, which may 
serve as a type of the genuine Eeyprian conformation. The long, oval cranium, the 
receding forehead, gently aquiline nose, and retracted chin, together with a marked dis- 
tance between the nose and mouth, and the long, smooth hair, are all characteristic of 
the monumental Egyptian. 
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