1 8 8 2 .] A nthropology. 5 i g 



gathering materials for another great induction. Not content 

 with the guesswork of his pupils, he determined to submit his own 

 theories to the most rigid scrutiny. 



Anthropology in Germany. — The Archiv fur Anthropologie, 

 issues a supplement to its thirteeth volume, which contains the 



HSlder, H. v. — The skeletons in the Roman cemetery in Regensburg. pp. 1-52. 

 Schmidt, Emil — The import of cranial capacity, pp. 53-80. 



S y'i 1, M 1 S l( .i li.i! . \ ,1hm 1. Rvji, I Kit In_;\ 11 1, III 7 unit 



One hundred and twenty pages of the supplement are devoted 

 to a Catalogue of Anthropological Literature, published mainly 

 in 18S0, containing.— 



I. Archaeology an 1 priscan history, by J. II. Milllsr. 



n. Anatomy, by A. Ecker. 



lit. Ethnography and Travels, by Dr. Fredrich Ratzel. 

 iv. Zoology in its relation to Anthropology, by Dr. W. Branco. 



Anthropology in Great Britain.— Vol. xi., No. 3, of the 

 Journal of the Anthropological Institute, is an exceptionally valu- 

 able contribution to knowledge, having very little of speculation 

 and a great deal of important information. The following is a list 

 of the papers : — 



Mr. Woodthorpe's paper is part 11. of his studies, respecting the 

 unktlted Xagas. The author minutely describes their physique, 

 customs, clothing, habitations, burial, skull trophies, and cere- 

 monies. Professor Thane describes the crania of the Nagas pro- 

 CU \t^ ^ Colonel Woodthorpe and others. 



Mr. Howorth, as is well-known, has given years of his life to 

 «* Slavic races and in I devotes his 



Pen to the Bulgarians. " There is a political Bulgaria and an 

 ct ln ' M>hic Bulgaria " The t\\ ) ire different in boundaries and 

 otherwise. The former includes all the country subject to the 



> r " in crown in the days of its greatest prosperity, the latter 

 mcnuie. the area peopled by Bulgarians properly so-called. ■ 



* «. Man was not only an eye-witness of what he has recorded, 



