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TRUBNER & CO., 60, PATERNOSTER ROW. 
Burmeister.— The Black Man; the Comparative Anatomy and Psychology 
of the African Negro, by Hermann Burmeister, Professor of Zoology at the 
University of Halle. Translated by J. Friedlander, Dr. Phil, of Berlin, and 
Bob. Tomes, M.D., of New York. 8vo, pp. 24. New York, 1853. sewed. Is. 
Caldwell. —Thoughts on the Original Unity of the Human Bace, by Charles 
Caldwell, M.D. Philadelphia, 1831. • 2nd edition. 8vo. Cincinnati, 1852. 
Campbell. —Negro-Mania; being an Examination of the falsely-assumed 
Equality of the various Baces of Men; demonstrated by the Investigations 
of Champollion, Wilkinson, Bosellini, Yan-Amringe, Gliddon, Young, 
Morton, Knox, Lawrence, Gen. J. LI. Hamond, Murray, Smith, W Gilmore 
Simms, English, Conrad, Elder, Prichard, Blumenbach, Cuvier, Brown, Le 
Yaillant, Carlyle, Cardinal Wiseman, Burckhardt, and Jefferson ; together 
with a concluding Chapter, presenting a Comparative Statement of the Con¬ 
dition of the Negroes in the West Indies before and since Emancipation, by 
John Campbell. 8vo. pp. 552. Philadelphia, 1851. cloth. 9s. 
De Gobineau. —The Moral and Intellectual Diversity of Baces ; with parti¬ 
cular Beferenee to their respective Influence in the Civil and Political His¬ 
tory of Mankind. From the French of Count A. de Gobineau; with an 
Analytical Introduction and Copious Historical Notes, by HI Hotz. To 
which is added, an Appendix containing a Summary of the latest Scientific 
Facts bearing upon the Question of Unity or Plurality of Species, by J. 
C. Nott, M.D., of Mobile, crown 8vo, pp. 516. Philadelphia, 1856. cloth. 8s. 1 
Garnett. —The Ammi (My People) Sbught and Identified with the Chinese,' 
by D. J. Garnett. 8vo. New York, 1850. 
Guyot. —The Earth and Man : Lectures on Comparative Physical Geography 
in its Belations to the History of Mankind, by Arnold Guyot. Translated 
from the French, by C. C. Feiton. 8vo. Boston, 1849. 7s. 6d. 
J ones. —A Candid Fkamination into the Origin of the Difference of Colour in 
the Human Family, by Charles Jones. 8vo. Philadelphia, 1822. 
Kinmont.— Twelve Lectures on the Natural History of Man, and the Bise 
and 1 Progress of Philosophy, by Alex. Kinmont. 8vo. Cincinnati, 1839. 12s. 
Meigs. —Catalogue of Human Crania in the Collection of the Academy of. 
Natural Sciences of Philadelphia: based upon the Third Edition of Dr. 
Morton’s “Catalogue of Skulls,” &c., by Aitken Meigs, M.D. 8vb, pp. 
112. Philadelphia, 1357- ... ,3s. 6d. 
Morton.— Crania Americana; or, a Comparative Yiew of the Skulls of 
various Aboriginal Nations of North and South America: to which is pre¬ 
fixed an Essay on the Varieties of the Human Species, by Samuel G. Mor¬ 
ton, M.D. Illustrated by 78 Plates and a coloured Map. folio, pp. vi. and 
298. Philadelphia, 1839. £8 8s. 
Morton,-— Crania ZEgyptiaca; or, Observations on Egyptian Ethnography, 
derived from Anatomy, History, and the Monuments (from the Transactions 
of the American Philosophical Society, Yol. IX.), by Samuel George Morton, 
M.D. 14 litho. Plates. 4to, pp. 68. Philadelphia, 1844. 
“ Les richesses craniologiques que vous avez ete assez heureux de reunir, ont trouve 
en vous un digue intefprete. Votre Ouvrage, Monsieur, est egalement remarquable 
par laprofondeur des Vues anatomicjues, par le detail num6rique des rapports de con¬ 
formation orga.nique, par /absence des reveries poetiques, qui sont les mythes de la 
physiologie'mioderne, par les gerieralites dont votre ‘ Introductory Essay ’ abonde. 
Bedigeant, dans ce moment, le plus important de mes Ouvrages, qui sera publie sous le 
titre imprudent de Kosmos, je saurai profiter de tant d’excellents apperqus sur la dis¬ 
tribution des ra.ces humaines, qui se trouvent epai-s dans votre beau Volume.—Que de 
sacrifices pecun iaires h’avez-vou's pas du faire, pour atteindre une si grande perfection 
artistique, et produire un Ouvrage qui rivalise avec tout ce qu’on a fait de plus beau 
en Angleterre et en France/’—Extract from a Letter addressed by Mr. A. de Hum¬ 
boldt tb Hr. Morton, Jan., 1844. 
“ The'magnificent publication of Dr. Morton, which far exceeds in its comprehen¬ 
siveness, and in the number and beauty of its engravings, any European work that 
has yet appeared on National Varieties of the Skull, comprises nearly the sum of our 
information on the distinctive characters of the head and skeleton in the several tribes 
of the New World.”—Prichard, Nat. Hist, of Man, 4th ed. ii. 502. 
