[225] Gould, Anomalies, p. 272.
[226] Revue Internat. des Sciences Med., November 1886.
[227] Achondroplasia, or imperfect development of cartilage with resulting imperfections in the extremities, has come under my observation. The first case, a man of 38, had a face arrested in development and the appearance of a ten-year-old boy. His jaws were small with a protrusion of the lower. His arms were absent. The hands were full sized and attached to the shoulder. Another case was that of a member of the Spanish nobility in whom degeneracy was stamped on the entire body. He was short in body and had an enormous head. The jaws were undeveloped with a V-shaped arch. His left hand was located near the shoulder.
[228] Alienist and Neurologist, January, 1898.
[229] Medicine, January, 1898.
[230] Wharton, Proc. Royal Society of Ireland, 1863.
[231] British Medical Journal, January 25, 1897.
[232] Meige, L’Anthropologie, T. 6, Nos. 3, 4, 5.
[233] Havelock Ellis, Psychology of Sex, vol. i. “Sexual Inversion.”
[234] Otis T. Mason, Smithsonian Contribution to Knowledge, 1888.