[1658] Knox, ‘The Races of Men,’ pp. 497, &c.
[1659] Nott and Gliddon, loc. cit. pp. 397, et seq.
[1660] Broca, ‘The Phenomena of Hybridity,’ p. 60. Pouchet, loc. cit. p. 101.
[1661] Prichard, ‘The Natural History of Man,’ p. 18.
[1662] Godron, loc. cit. vol. ii. p. 363.
[1663] de Quatrefages, loc. cit. p. 264.
[1664] Broca, p. 48.
[1665] Ibid., p. 48.
[1666] Curr, loc. cit. vol. ii. p. 264. Cf. Topinard, ‘Note sur les métis d’Australiens et d’Européens,’ in ‘Revue d’Anthropologie,’ vol. iv. pp. 243-249.
[1667] Dr. T. R. H. Thomson says ('On the Reported Incompetency of the “Gins,”‘ in ‘Jour. Ethn. Soc. London,’ vol. iii. pp. 244, et seq.) that the Australian woman, when she places herself under the roof of a European settler as his concubine or wife, appears to become less fertile, although she has more regular diet, comfort, and covering.