Anthropology; an introduction to the study of man and civilization . RACES OF MANKIND. ICI. I02 ANTHROPOLOGY. [chap. seemingly a distant branch of the Mongoloid, which spreadsover Sumatra, Java, and other islands of the EasternArchipelago. Figs. 37 and 38 give portraits of the morecivilised Malays, while Fig. 39 shows the Dayaks of Borneo,who represent the race in a wilder and perhaps less mixedstate. From the Malay Archipelago there stretch into thePacific the island ranges first of Micronesia and then ofPolynesia, till we reach Easter Island to the east and NewZealand to the south. The


Anthropology; an introduction to the study of man and civilization . RACES OF MANKIND. ICI. I02 ANTHROPOLOGY. [chap. seemingly a distant branch of the Mongoloid, which spreadsover Sumatra, Java, and other islands of the EasternArchipelago. Figs. 37 and 38 give portraits of the morecivilised Malays, while Fig. 39 shows the Dayaks of Borneo,who represent the race in a wilder and perhaps less mixedstate. From the Malay Archipelago there stretch into thePacific the island ranges first of Micronesia and then ofPolynesia, till we reach Easter Island to the east and NewZealand to the south. The Micronesians and Polynesiansshow connexion with the Malays in language, and more orless in bodily make. But they are not Malays proper, andthere are seen among them high faces, narrow noses, andsmall mouths which remind us of the European face, as inthe Micronesian, Fig. 40, who stands here to represent thisvaried group of peoples. The Maoris are still further frombeing pure Malays, as is seen by their more curly hair, oftenprominent and even aquiline noses. It seems likely that anAsiatic ra


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Keywords: ., bookcentury1800, bookdecade1890, booksubjectcivilization, bookyea