[25] Joest, Verh. Berl. gesell. Anthr., p. 450, 1887; Topinard, Elem. Anthr. gén., p. 436.

[26] Manouvrier, Bull. Soc. Anthr. Paris, p. 264, 1896.

[27] B. A. Gould, Investigations in the Milit. and Anthrop. Statistics of American Soldiers, New York, 1869.

[28] Final Report of the Anthropometric Committee, Brit. Ass., 1883.

[29] Pagliani, Lo sviluppo umano per età, etc. Milan, 1879.

[30] These figures differ from those up to the present given in most works, according to Topinard (Elem. Anthro. gén., p. 462), who fixes the limits between 1 m. 44 (Bushmen of the Cape) and 1 m. 85 (Patagonians), but the first of these figures is that of a series of six subjects only, measured by Fritsch, and the second the average of ten subjects measured by Lista and Moreno. This is insufficient, and since the publication of Topinard’s work we have only been able to add a few isolated observations concerning those interesting populations the actual height of which is still to be determined.

[31] Topinard, Elem. Anthr. gén., p. 463.

[32] Final Report Brit. Assoc., 1883, p. 17.

[33] Beddoe, The Stature and Bulk of Man in the Brit. Isles, pp. 148 et seq. London, 1870.

[34] Houzé, Bull. Soc. Anthr. Bruxelles, 1887; Roberts, A Manual of Anthropometry, London, 1878, and Jour. Stat. Soc., London, 1876; Anuchin, “O geograficheskom, etc.,” Geograph. Distrib. of Stature in Russia, St. Petersburg, 1889; Erisman, Arch. f. soz. gesetzgeb., Tübingen, 1888.