Anthropology; an introduction to the study of man and civilization . Fig. 28.—Australian (Queensland) womeii. chocolate-colour, maybe taken as a special type of the brownraces of man. While their skull is narrow and prognathouslike the negros, it differs from it in special points which have 94 ANTHROPOLOGY. [chap. been already mentioned (page 60), and has, indeed, pecu-liarities which distinguish it very certainly from that of otherraces. In the portraits of Australians, Figs. 26, 27, 28, theremay be noticed the heavy brows and projecting jaws, thewide but not flat nose, the full lips, and the
Anthropology; an introduction to the study of man and civilization . Fig. 28.—Australian (Queensland) womeii. chocolate-colour, maybe taken as a special type of the brownraces of man. While their skull is narrow and prognathouslike the negros, it differs from it in special points which have 94 ANTHROPOLOGY. [chap. been already mentioned (page 60), and has, indeed, pecu-liarities which distinguish it very certainly from that of otherraces. In the portraits of Australians, Figs. 26, 27, 28, theremay be noticed the heavy brows and projecting jaws, thewide but not flat nose, the full lips, and the curly but notwoolly black hair. Looking at the map of the world to see. Fjg. 29.—Dravidian hill-man (after Fryer). where brown races next appear, good authorities defineone on the continent of India. There the hill-tribes presentthe type of the old dwellers in south and central India beforethe conquest by the Aryan Hindus, and its purest formappears in tribes hardly tilling the soil, but living a wildlife in the jungle, while the great mass, more mixed inrace with the Hindus, under whose influence they have RACES OF MANKIND. 95 b^eii ior Tiges, now form the great Dravidian nations ofthe south, such as the Tamil and Telugu. Fig. 29 repre-sents one of the ruder Dravidians, from the Travancorcforests. Farther svest, it has been thought that a bro-\vn
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Keywords: ., bookcentury1800, bookdecade1890, booksubjectcivilization, bookyea