436 Scientific Intelligence. 
the ankle. The long hair of the arm and forearm presents the dark 
fuscous color; the same tint extends from below the axilla downwards 
and forwards upon the abdomen, where the darker tint contrasts with the 
Jighter grey upon the back. The scanty hair of the cheeks and chin is 
dark; the pigment of the naked skin of the face is black. The breast is 
almost naked, and the hair is worn short or partially rubbed off across the 
back, over the upper border of the iliac bones, in consequence, as it 
appears, of the habit ascribed by Mr. Du Chaillu to the great male gonilla 
of keeping at the foot of a tree, resting its back against the trunk. The 
skin of the great male gorilla, as mounted in the British Museum, exhibits 
two opposite wounds,—the smaller in front on the left side of the chest, 
the larger close to the lower part of the right biade-bone. Two of the 
and 
the trunk, arms and thighs. The naked part of the skin of the face ap- 
yebrows. A 
borders the upper lip, the whole of the lower lip and sides of the hes 
The rich series 
of skulls and skeletons brought home by Mr. Du Chaillu illustrate some 
ified by Prof. 
human child, but an interspace equal to half the breadth of the outer 
incisor divides that tooth from the canine, and the crown of the ae 
fro ‘ i he ear 
nt one. In the later development of the canines and the th differs, 
development and succession. An opportunity of observing this oriee 
lower cf 
inity in the case of the male and female dwarf 
