Sullivan — Toiigaii Soiiiafologv 235 



METHOD 



All measurements were taken in accordance with the regulations of the 

 International Agreement. The technicjue is described in some detail in my previous 

 paper" but for the sake of convenience is here repeated in outline. Each measure- 

 ment and index is numbered, and in the tables throughout this paper these numbers 

 refer consistently to the same measurements. 



Anthropombtric Characters 



1. Stature: recorded to the nearest centimeter (shoes removed). 



2. Maximum head length : from the glabella to the opisthocranium. 



3. Maximum head width. 



4. IMinimum frontal diameter: transverse. 



5. Maximum face width or bizygomatic diameter. 



6. Bigonial diameter at the angle of the mandible avoiding as 



much of the muscles as possible. 



7. Anatomical face height ; nasion to gnathion. 



8. Nose height nasion to subnasale. 



9. Nasal width ; alare to alare. 



10. Physiognomic ear length or height. 



11. Physiognomic ear breadth. 



INDICES 



measurement No. 3 X 100 



12. Cephalic or length-breadth index = 



13. Transverse fronto-parietal index 



measurement No. 2 

 measurement No. 4 X 100 



measurement No. 3 



I A tr~ 1 1 r • I ■ 1 measurement No. 5 X 100 



14. Transverse cephalo-facial mdex = ^^ ' 



measurement No. 3 



1 ^ „ ^- r . , ■ 1 measurement No. 4 X 100 



o. Zygomatico-frontal mdex = :rr z 



measurement No. b 



(Sometimes designated as the jugo-frontal index) 



-^ „ . 1M 1 ■ 1 measurement No. 6X 100 



16. Zygomatico-mandibular mdex = 



measurement No. 5 

 (Sometimes designated as the jugo-mandibular index) 



measurement No. 7 X 100 



17. Anatomical facial index 



18. Nasal index 



measurement No. 5 

 measurement No. 9 X 100 



19. Physiognomic ear index 



measurement No. 8 



measurement No. 11 X 100 



measurement No. 10 



The anthropometric data were supplemented by observations on characters 

 not quantitatively measurable. In view of the widespread misconception as to the 

 nature of these characters and their value in somatology, it seems desirable to 



= Op. cit. 



[sJ 



