APPENDIX. 
I. 
ETHNOLOGY. 
By George Rolleston, M.D., F.R.S. 
Linacre Professor of Anatomy and Physiology in the University of Oxford. 
The following human bones — viz. four skulls, six lower 
jaws, four cervical vertebrae, one large and one small sized 
scapula, two small sized and fragmentary humeri, a 
fragment of a very slight but adult ulna, four cervical 
vertebrae, and five more or less fragmentary ribs — have 
been put into my hands by Mr, C. G. Oates, with informa- 
tion to the effect that they had belonged probably to a 
Bushman horde massacred somewhere between the Tati 
and Ramaqueban rivers, in S. lat. 20° 54', and long. 27= 42'. 
With these human bones came some bones of Eqims [ca- 
hallus or zebra f) ; also of one large ruminant {Bos taurus 
or Bos caffer), and one smaller ; and part of the skull of an 
ostrich {StnitJuo camehis) ; and, later, the feet-bones of an 
elephant {Elephas africanus). All these bones had been 
collected by my former pupil, Mr. Frank Oates, of Christ 
Church, Oxford. The four skulls had not their lower 
jaws assigned to them ; but to three of them jaws were 
assignable, which in all probability had really belonged to 
them, being very exactly coadaptable, to say nothing of 
their having been sent in company with them and with 
T 
