REVIEWS. 153 
1l i h owever, the 
ae That ny! Ta case of the Peruvian Skulls i the Academy) 
d forms 
gpa That in North America neither the Dolichocephalic nor Brachycephalic tribes 
when first known to Europeans, were restricted in their aphical distribution to an say 
ee — a the former were scattered over the continent, through all de- 
£ 1 longitude; the latter eet. o naya nei n, if we may jud; rom the 
Specimens in the M: i kes, at various places in the 
interior, in tl the Gulf of Mexico, in the so-called Paduea area, and especially 
“pera the portae es In general terms we may say that on the eastern or Atlantic 
inent ee ee appear to have prevailed; and on the western or 
Pacific side the Brachycepal This, ina great measure, seems to have been, and still is, 
e case in South America. 
5th. That ms g and short-headed t ear or races are very commonly found throughout 
the two Ame y side. In the extreme north, for example, dolichocephalic an 
brachycephalic fi are contrasted i in She Esquimaux and thel eir it Soveraeeeet neighbors, 
the Kongi or Kadiakan Aleut g 
neg he Patagonians and Puciches. 
t thi z 3 +1 ; fA . ea tt 
d 
now ies smong extant tribes. 
7th. That ld d iss 
in Europe and Asia the brachycephalic is te jehda form, in N orth America the doli- 
chocephalic is hag predomina: 
; in That while in Africa all the people are dolichocephalio, in South America they are 
nearly equal 
9th. That while in Europe and Asia tl Arctic people are chiefly brachycepha- 
lic, in eae they are wholly dolichocephalic. 
10th. That various European, Asia tic, and African crania, such as those of Norwegians, 
oat o-Sa 
the Q jad Q 
3 Germans, oe Finns, Lapps, Turks, Sclavonians, Kalmucks, Burats, Prognathic Negroes, 
aa That thie h PT * * ‘ aig ee farm ee 
= is shown in ab die ge E ay 
ally 
That the That; E . 
Ith. Tha licl ii types; 
y, the pyramidal, bo t-shaped, oval, cylindrical, oblong, and arched. 
R That the Brachycephali may be divided into round or globular, and square or cu- 
Phat th AT, + ak Ad ae | eats, Ds. f 
J 5 PS, 
tt . That di ethnical or typical groups are f founded Lipon osteological differences as 
<n ai 
P 
ps Celtic stocks. an th 1 a a Peng nT Tra rkich A Spl. 4, on the other. 
> 
A TREATISE on some OF THE INSECTS INJURIOUS TO VEGETATION. By 
T. W. Harris, M. D. Third Edition. Boston. Crosby & Nichols. 
The publication of this work, aside from his strictly scientific oa 
Pers, secured to the author a high cual as an e 
Was one of those few naturalists who specially studied the habits 2 
richly illus- 
TE 
pee VOL. r: 9 
