May is, 1883.] 



SCIENCE. 



415 



Lord Ellenboi'ough . . . 



*Wollaston 



Malthus 



* Sir J. Herschel .... 



t Peacock 



tWhewell 



* Sir G. B. Airy 



*Challis : . 



Willis 



De Morgan 



Lund 



Snowball 



* Cavendisll (Duke of Devonshir 

 Murpliy 



* Earnshaw 



Dean Alford 



Arclideacon Pratt . . . 



*Kelland 



t Bishop Colenso .... 



Walton 



Sylvester 



George Green 



Gregory 



O'Brien 



* Frost 



t Bisliop Goodwin . . . . 



* Stokes 



*Cayiey 



* Adams 



Goodeve 



t Parkinson 



* Sir William Tliomson . . 

 *Todhunter 



Westcott 



* Besant 



t Watson 



Wolstenliolme 



* Ferrers 



»Tait 



t Steele 



Godfray 



,JKoutli 



"IJ. C. Maxwell 



Fawcett 



*Aldis 



Freeman 



* Strutt (Lord Rayleigh) . . 



W. D. Niven 



Stuart 



Niven (Cork) 



t Clifford 



t G. H. Darwin 



if j Pendlebury ■, 



iGreenhill 



J. W. L. Glaisher . . . . 

 t Lamb 



Garnett , 



*Burnside , 



t Chrystal , 



Glazebrook 



The3' have a dialect of their own. Thej- are 

 probably the aborigines of the Philippines, if 

 not Papuans who went there from the southern 

 groups of New Guinea at a very early period. 

 They are short in 

 stature, about five 

 feet, slim, with crisp 

 black hair, which 

 the}- wear as a bush}' 

 mop, uncombed be- 

 cause uncombable. 

 Thej' have not the 

 vevy flat nose, ugly 

 features, thick lips, 

 and intensely black 

 skin of the African ; 

 but their color is 

 dark, lighter in the 

 dwellers in the sun- 

 less forests, the nose flattened, eyes large 

 and restless, with the sclerotic yellowish. 

 When young, the form is graceful ; but the 

 extremes of hunger and repletion, with their 

 almost exclusive vegetable food, give to the 

 adults a protuberant abdomen and lank hmbs. 

 The old women look hke hags. They have 

 no fixed habitations, but wander in bands of 



NEGRITO OP LUZON. 



NEGRITA OP LUZON. 



THE NEGRITOS OF LUZON. 



THEAjetas,orNegritos, number over thirteen fifty to a hundred wherever the supply of 



thousand, inhabiting chiefly the wooded moun- food is the richest. Their voices are shrill, 



tainsofnorthern, southern, and western Luzon, and their gestures and agility monkej'-like. 



