INDEX. 



Abipones, 140, 149, 258, 

 293 



Aborigines, rights, 165 



Abyssinians, 45, 210, 325, 

 326 



Acclimatization, 199 ; of 

 white, 125 



Acosta, 184, 370 



Adair, 371 



Adams, 106 



Adiahs, 213 



Adultery, 325 



Africa, 257, 369 



Agassiz, 21, 22, 32, 196, 

 203, 233, 351 



Age, signs of, 1 14 



Agriculture, 336, 353 



Aguanas, 219 



Ainos, 42 



Alberti, 118 



Albinism, 85 



Aleutes, 149, 257, 314, 339 



Alexander, 118 



Alfurus, 221 



Algoa Bay, 147 



Algonquins, 148, 249, 257, 

 374 



Algerian Arabs, 152 



Aliment and mode of life, 

 34 



Allen and Thomson, 131, 

 133, 143, 212, 213 



Allerhand, 258 



Amboyna, 365 



America, 257 



Americans, 144, 238, 242, 

 255, 306 



American lean compared 

 with Englishman, 53 



American school of an- 

 thropology, 351 



American school, 22 



American Indians, 61, 145 



Amerigo Vespucci, 122 



Amock, running, 332 



Analogies between na- 

 tions, 255 



Anamese, 304 



Anatomy a branch of an- 

 thropology, 6 



Ancient buildings, 195 



Andersson, 278 



Angola, 311 



Animal heat, 109 



Anatomical differences in 

 man, 90 



Ancon sheep, 82 



Anderson, 55 



Andrews, 308 



Anthropology discussed in 

 America as a party 

 question, 1 ; scarcely 

 yet touched upon in 

 Germany, 1; comprises 

 the labours of the zoo- 

 logist, geologist, lin- 

 guist, historian, and 

 psychologist, 1 ; defini- 

 tion of, 3 ; formerly re- 

 stricted to the differ- 

 ences between man and 

 animals, 5 ; formerly in- 

 cluded such natur- 

 philosophical subjects 

 as the origin of man- 

 kind, animal magnet- 

 ism, etc., 5 ; sometimes 

 treated empirically, 

 sometimes philosophi- 

 cally, 5 ; its empirical 

 definition the one ad 

 hered to in this work, 

 5 ; includes the ana- 

 tomy, physiology, and 

 psychology of man on 

 the one side, and the 

 history of civilization on 

 the other,6 ; its relations 

 to history, 8 



Anthropophagy, 296 



Antiquity of man, 194, 285 



Apaches, 148,150,373 



Ape, man compared with, 

 91 



Ape and negro, a certain 

 resemblance between, 

 100 



Appendix to Section II, 144 



Apron of Hottentot wo- 

 men, 105 



Aquapim, 212 



Arab children swim, 88 



Arabs, 61, 63, 115, 218, 

 254, 332, 339 



Arabs of Sennaar, 101 



Araucafios, 103, 146, 309, 

 316 



Arbousset and Daumas, 

 137, 171, 186 



Archer, 373 



Argentine republic, 308 



Aristotle, 10, 281, 380 



Aristocracy, hereditary, of 

 the mind, 89 



Arnauts, 314 



Arnoux, 94, 98, 100 



Arowakas, 46 



Arowaki, 115, 306 



Arm islands, 278 



Arsenic used to poison 

 aborigines, 167 



Artistic talents trans- 

 mitted, 89 



Ashantees, ]42, 212, 304 



Assuan, 818 



Atavism, 168 



Athens, 317 



Atmosphere, hygrometric 

 state of, 34 



Australians, 58, 100, 102, 

 103,116,135, 140, 144, 

 176, 204, 233, 257, 296, 

 297, 300, 304, 306, 312, 

 325, 334, 357 



Author's preface, 1 



Avare skull, 239 



Axe, 309 



Aymaras, 216 



Azara, 123, 140, 151, 183, 

 251, 345 



Aztecs, 255 



