1920. | Bodily Measurements and Human Races. 51 
diversities among peoples usually believed to be of fairly pure 
stock. e number of illustrations that I can bring to your 
My photographs are those (a) of Chinese carpenters from 
Canton and (6) of Siamese! criminals and countrymen from 
the Province of Patani. Those of the Chinese (fig. 5) are par- 
ticularly interesting. One of the men a of a common Mongoloid 
ou 
man, has certain non-Mongoloid features, particularly his prom- 
inent nose and chin.? This case is one in which I do not 
wish to be dogmatic, for in it a pathological rather than a 
racial explanation might possibly be correct, and the atypical 
individual may be so not because of heredity but because of 
physiological idiosyncracy. 
1 Not reproduced here. : : 
2 Cf. Prof. Keith’s address to the Anthropological Section of the 
British Association for 1919, reported in Nature, vol. CIV, No. 2611. 
