iS i- 



AN'IMIUol'OLOdY 



(l(i\v]i tci wit hill a fduple of 

 Iniiiili'ed miles o\ Kliar- 

 tuiu, and Ironi tlie wcslcni 

 slojies of the Aliv>>iiiiaii 

 I'latcau acrcjss tlir I'alii'- 

 al-(Tliazal to ^^'alI(dai ami 

 Lake Cliad. Tin' type 

 mav e\'eii exleiid thi'oiioh 

 llan.-alaiid towards Seiie- 

 eamliia.'" Hei-e and t here, 

 (.)! eourse, there has lieeii 

 interiiiixt iir(\ ancient or 

 reeent . with I laniil es, and 

 ronsei|Uentlv the resull 

 ma\' lie an imjirovenient 

 ill ]ih\sieal lieant \' ; or 

 t here has lieeii niineliiiy' 

 with the l'ye)iiy-l'rc)i;aia- 

 t lions, or the \\ est African, 

 Neeix), uv the Bantu. 

 I^'rom these crosses aris(^ 

 trilies like the ?\\am- 

 \ vani, the Leiidii, and the 

 .Ahidi. This Nilolii' Xi'gvo 

 t \-pe jieiietrates south- 

 castwartls into the I ganda 

 Protectorate, and has left 

 an isolated colony in the 

 countries round Ka\ir<.indo 

 ]5ay. 



'I'he fourth of these 

 racial di\isi(iiis is th(^ Masai, a section which stands \erv much a]iart from 

 other ?\i'gio races. l*erh.a|is on the whole its pli\sical ajipearance may be 

 ex|ilaine(l li\- an ancient intermixture lietweeii the Ilamite and Neero, 

 followed 1)\' a [leriod of isolation which caused the Masai to develo]i special 

 feature> of their own. Kelated to I lie .Masai are the Srik-Turkana — the 

 tall, almost gieantic trihes that dwell fietweeii J^ake Ijariugo and the 

 ncalli-we-t of ]>ake Kiidolf — and the Nandi-Ijumliwa, with their offshoot, the 

 .soniewdiat nicaignd trihe of ,\ndorolio. 



The tilth and la--t amongst these main stocks is the Hamitic, wdiich 



Many of the llausa. aiidof tlicKaiiuii ( Ijnrim) ari' strikiiiL;Tv hkc the Xilc Nc,i;i(ies 

 in aiiiiL-aranru. 



^.iv.; 



2b4. .\(.'lli'i.i Mi.i.; M..i.i;(.)l.;.-, 



