1920.] Bodily Measurements and Human Races. 53 
EXPLANATION OF PLATES. 
of India, to the Director of which any inquiries about them should 
7 
to colour are those of the slips of glass in Lovébond’s pigmentation 
meter (see Man, vol. viii, No. 27)]. 
Pruate III. 
Fic. 1.—Lateral view of the full figure of a young Anglo- 
Indian of upright carriage. 
Ancestry. Maternal grandfather English; Maternal 
andmother Burmese ; Paternal grandfather Scotch ; 
Paternal grandmother “Anglo-Indian.’” Age29. Pro- 
fession laboratory assistant and clerk, but addicted 
to physical exercises. State of health good; weight 
109 Ib. Skin yellowish olive (on inner surface of 
upper arm 3 red, 2 yellow, 1 blue by anthropological 
tintometer). Stature 164 cm. Cephalic index 78°38. 
Nasal index 81:81. Upper facial index 4446. Pro- 
portionate length of lower limb (from head of great tro- 
chanter) 52°01. Face remarkably square ; cheek-bones 
flat but not coarse. yes narrow, with slight trace of 
lower part triangular as seen from in front, rounded at 
the tip and by no means prominent ; nostrils pointing 
downwards and slightly forwards, patent. Note the 
straight line of the lower limb, trunk, neck and head. 
Fig. 2.—Lateral view of the full figure of Chinaman with round 
shoulders and bandy legs. 
the lower part being broadly rounded. Cheek-bones 
prominent but not very flat ique, 
with a well-developed epicanthus. Nose long, prom- 
inent, convex in profile and slightly hooked; the 
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