418 REPORTS ON THE STATE OF SCIENCE, ETC. 
craniometry. The library contains most of the foreign transactions and 
journals on anthropology, and memoirs on anthropometry and craniometry. 
In the anthropometric laboratory, which is one of the most complete of its 
kind, physical, mental, and medical measurements are made under a special 
medical officer. In anthropometry and craniometry provision is only made for 
graduate workers; but undergraduate students of anthropometry are admitted 
occasionally, and a complete course of anthropometry could easily be organised 
if there were any demand for it. 
The Natural History Department of the British Museum, in South 
Kensington, has important collections of early remains of man and associated 
handiwork, as well as of typical modern crania; research students may be 
permitted to use the Departmental Library and workrooms. 
Ethnography and Archwology.—The national collections of ethnographical 
and archeological material and literature are in the British Museum, in Blooms- 
bury. The India Museum at South Kensington and the Horniman Museum 
have considerable ethnographic and archeological collections. 
University College has a collection of Egyptian antiquities in the Edwards 
Library, but in view of the proximity of the British Museum in Bloomsbury, 
this and other collections of anthropological material at University College are 
intended for teaching and demonstration rather than for comprehensive study. 
Instruction is given in Egyptology by the Edwards Professor, Sir Flinders 
Petrie, F.R.S., and by the Senior Lecturer, Miss M. A. Murray; in Archeology 
by the Yates Professor, Dr. E. A. Gardner, and by the Lecturer in Comparative 
Art, Mr. H. G. Spearing. The Department of Economic Geography has 
occasional courses in general ethnography. 
King’s College has special libraries and research material for Slavonic coun- 
tries, Spanish-speaking regions, and medieval and modern Greece. 
The School of Oriental Studies at the London Institution is mainly con- 
cerned with languages and literatures, but has a general library and a small 
collection of anthropological photographs. In the examination for the Diploma 
in Bantu Languages a paper is set on Anthropology and Ethnology. 
The London School of Economics and Political Science has a considerable 
teaching collection of ethnographical specimens, casts, photographs, and lantern 
slides. The Professor of Ethnology in the University, Dr. C. G. Seligman, 
F.R.S., gives instruction at the School in Ethnography, including Technology ; 
and Mr. T. A. Joyce gives instruction in Ethnography at the School and 
demonstrations in the British Museum. Professor Seligman also lectures on 
European Prehistory, and gives special courses on Human Geography, intended 
for teachers. Laboratory accommodation is not provided, but there are rooms 
for research students, and the General Library of the School is open to students 
duly recommended. 
Social Anthropology.—University College has a Reader in Cultural Anthro- 
pology, Mr. W. J. Perry; and instruction is also given in special aspects of 
the subject by the Quain Professor of Comparative Law, Mr. J. E. G. de 
Montmorency, and by Miss M. A. Murray in the Department of Egyptology. 
The Martin White Professors of Sociology, Dr. L. T. Hobhouse and Dr. E. 
Westermarck, and the Reader in Social Anthropology, Dr. B. Malinowski, give 
instruction at the London School of Economics; the courses of the Professor | 
of Ethnography include instruction in fieldwork, intended for officials, | 
missionaries, and others going among primitive and barbarous peoples. At the | 
Imperial Institute special courses in Ethnology form part of the Tropical | 
Services course for officers of the African Civil Service. 
Besides the Libraries of the British Museum and the constituent Colleges of 
the University, of the India Office, Colonial Office, and other Government 
Departments, and of learned Societies such as the Royal Anthropological Insti- 
tute, the Royal Colonial Institute. the Royal Asiatic and Royal Geographical 
Societies, the Folk-Lore Society, Japan Society, and the like (which are open 
to students duly recommended, as well as to their own members or Fellows). 
there is much valuable material in the Library of the London School of 
Economics and Political Science. which includes a special section for Social 
Anthropology, open to recommended students. At Leplay House (65 Belgrave | 
Road, Westminster) there is, in addition to the library of the Sociological” 
Society, a collection of material for regional surveys of present-day communities, — 
and the Department of Surveys contemplates the training of survey workers. 
