[123] See Daniel Wilson, in the British Review, 1851; and in Stephens, the description of the Temple of Uxmal.
[124] See Bulletins de la Société de Géographie, 4th series, vol. x, p. 45. It must not be forgotten that these weapons with a small handle may have been used by those valiant heroines, whose praises have so often been sung in the songs of the north.
[125] Presented by A. C. Harris, Esq., 1840.
[126] [Compare the memoir of Professor C. G. Carus, Ueber die Typisch geurdenen abbildungen menschlichen kopfformen namentlich auf münzen in verschiedenen zeiten und volkern, published in the Novorum Actorum Academiæ Cæsareæ Leopoldini-Carolinæ Germanicæ naturæ curiosum for 1863, in which the author gives characteristic examples of the ancient types, as deduced from the examination of coins, etc. Compare, also, Nott and Gliddon, Types of Mankind.—Editor.]
[127] See especially Lepsius, Denkmaeler von Egypten und Œthiopen, vol. ii, pl. 133; vol. iii, pl. 116, 117, 118, 136.
[128] Bérard, Cours de Physiologie, Paris, 1848, vol. i, p. 394.
[129] See J. H. Hanneman, Curiosum Scrutinium Nigredinus Posterorum Cham, in 4to, Kiloni, 1677, § 14.
[130] See Pruner-Bey, Bulletins de la Société d’Anthropologie, 5th March, 1863.
[131] See, upon this point, G. Pouchet, Des Colorations de l’Epiderme, 4to, Paris, 1864.
[132] Bory de Saint-Vincent divided mankind into Leucotriques and Ulotriques (see Bérard, Cours de Physiologie, 1848, vol. i, p. 394). Prichard refers all these races to the three following types:—1. Melanocomous; 2. Leucous; 3. Xanthous (see English Cyclopædia, art. “Man”).