1 882.] 





Anthropology. 



82 



Karlhwoi 



Its at Flamborough and Yorkshire wolds. Maj.-Gen. Pitt-Rivers. 



Composil 



■e Portraiture. By 



Francis Galton. 







dwellings found on 



Yorkshire wolds. By I. R. Mortimer. 



The orig 



in and use of oval 1 



tool-stones. W. J. Knowles. 





Flint imr 



dements in stratifie 



d gravel near Thebes. By Maj.. 



Gen. Pitt-Rivers. 



Report of the Anthropomet: 







A collect 



ion of racial photographs. By J. Park Harrison. 







vian and Pictish cu 





der. By Dr. Phene. 



The geoj 



;raphical distributic 



>n of mankind. By Miss A. W. 





The Pap 



nans and Polynesia 



OS. By C. Staniland Wake. 





Excavali 



ons at Ambresburg 



banks in Epping forest. By Ma 





Relation. 



i of stone circles to 



outlying stones or tumuli or ne 



ighboring hills. By A 











Saw cuts 



and drill holes in 1 



bard stones of primeval Egyptia: 



a period. By W. Flin 



Relation: 



5 of the Hebrew, 



&c, alphabets and the Khita 



inscription. By Hyd. 



Colon izal 



:ion of Cyprus and 



Attica in relation to Babylonia. 



By Hyde Clarke. 





of the Indians of 



British Guiana. By Everard F. 



im Thurm. 





id primitive home . 



af the Semites. By G. Berlin. 





I he cultivation of the senses. By George Harris. 



Traces of Man in the Crag. By H. Stopes. 



Excavations in the caves of Cefu, N. Wales. By Professor T. Mck. Hughes and 



A Roman bronze galeated bust. By Professor Hughes. 



Celtic engravings on a slate tablet from Towyn. By J. Park Harrison. 



Physical characters and proportions of the Zulus. By C. Roberts and George W. 



Bloxam. 

 Stone implements from Asia Minor. By Hyde Clarke. 

 Profile of the Danes and Germans. By J. Park Harrison. 

 Remarkable human skull found near York. By Edward Allen. 



Anthropology in France. — The Bulletins of the Societe 

 d'Anthropologie, though somewhat slow in making their appear- 

 ance, are well edited. By an inspection of the titles given below 

 it will be seen that the society still pursues with assiduity those 

 biological investigations which have all along made it famous. 

 The following papers in the volume of 1881, have more than a 

 local interest : 



Ardouin.—Craniologie des criminels, 709. 



Bordier.— Rechercl,,-, . tin, .graphi hi, - dans lc Mackensie, 57. 

 Cartadhac. — Archeologie prehistorique en Portugal, 2S1. 

 Chervin.— Population de France en 1881, 790. 



