ANTHROPOLOGICAL RESULTS. 



37 ! 



(Diagr. VIII, left half). Beside 9 narrow-headed little men there are indeed only 6 broad- 

 headed little men, but beside 7 broad-headed tall men there are 10 narrow-headed tall ones. 

 Hère a simple corrélation is altogether out of the question. 



From Diagr. VIII appears inevitably that there will be a fairly strong corrélation 

 between increasing standing-height and dolichocephaly. On Diagr. IX (right part) we see 

 it affirmed. Beside 10 high-statured "oval"-heads we find only 4 high-statured "round"-heads 

 and beside 8 low-statured round-heads there are only 3 low-statured oval-heads. 



Now the question arises : ought the long skulls of the right half of Diagr. VIII be 



Diagram VIII. 



Stand. Height 



1S7 1) 

 I 





1 



1 

 1 

 1 

 1 



1 

 1 



1 

 1 



1 



1 ; 



; . . 

 1 



' ' 



170 



9 



S 



7 



6 



165 



J 

 3 



1 

 100 . , 



| . — , 



1 



1 



1 



1 



1 



• 

 • • 



1 • • . . . a 



• 



• 1 



T 



. 





_t_l_ - 



1 





1 • 



• 



A • • • 







• t 



1 



• 1 



• 1 



1 

 1 

 1 

 1 



! 



• « 



m • • 



; 



9 • • 



f, . 



145 



1 



' 



154-5 (M) 



145 M 150 



Breadth of head. Timoiïni 



I.cngth of head, Timorini. 



considered as belonging to the narrow ones of the left half? The graphie record suggests 

 this supposition. If the latter proved to be true, we should hâve to distinguish two types of 

 skulls: a narrow-long type and a broad-short type, in which case the probability of the 

 Timorini being crossbreeds would increase. Diagr. X (right half) however tells us otherwise. 

 We find 4 long-narrow heads and 2 short-broad heads, while the 8 long-broad skulls and 

 the 13 narrow-short skulls form the majority. So we can state on the contrary a corrélation 

 in the sensé of longer heads — broader heads. Hence the highly concentrated curve of the 



1) The dotted lice ought to start from lî 

 placed at equal distances from eachother. 

 Nova Guinea. VII. 4. Ethnographie. 



There is another inexactitude: the figures in the middle ought to be 



