Anthropology; an introduction to the study of man and civilization . Fig. II.—a, Swaheli ; 6, Persian. Hottentot {{?), show the effect of high cheek-bones. TheTatar and Japanese faces {d, e) show the skew-eyelids of theMongjolian race. Much of the character of the human facedepends on the shape of the softer parts—nose, lips, ,chin, &c., which are often excellent marks to distinguish in the form of nose may even exceed that hereshown between the aquiline of the Persian and the snubof the Negro in Figs, ii and 13. European travellersin Tartary in the middle ages described


Anthropology; an introduction to the study of man and civilization . Fig. II.—a, Swaheli ; 6, Persian. Hottentot {{?), show the effect of high cheek-bones. TheTatar and Japanese faces {d, e) show the skew-eyelids of theMongjolian race. Much of the character of the human facedepends on the shape of the softer parts—nose, lips, ,chin, &c., which are often excellent marks to distinguish in the form of nose may even exceed that hereshown between the aquiline of the Persian and the snubof the Negro in Figs, ii and 13. European travellersin Tartary in the middle ages described its flat-nosed. Fig. 12 —Female portraits, a, Negrro (W. Africa) ; h, Barobng (S. Africa); c, Hot-tentot; d, Gilyak(N. Asia) ; e, Japanese ; / Colorado Indian (N. America), g, English. III.] RACES OF MANKIND. 65 inhabitants as having no noses at all, but breathino-through holes in their faces. By pushing the tips of ourown noses upward, we can in some degree imitate themanner in which various other races, notably the negro,show the opening of the nostrils in full face. Our thin,close-litting lips, differ in the extreme from those of the


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Keywords: ., bookcentury1800, bookdecade1890, booksubjectcivilization, bookyea