The Eskimo is the only family common to the Old and the New World.
The large Greenland tent, with its furniture, and a canoe, is from one of the few ethnological museums in existence,—that of Copenhagen; from which it has been liberally and courteously supplied to the Crystal Palace. The details are due to the skill and care of Professor Thomsen of that capital.
BIBLIOGRAPHY.
1. For the Tibetans, &c., Turner’s Embassy; Works on the Himalayas, by Thomson and Hooker; Cunningham’s Ladakh.
2. The Aborigines of India, by B. Hodgson; Papers in Asiatic Researches; Transactions of the Asiatic Society; Transactions of the Asiatic Society of Bengal, &c. &c.
3, 4. Marsden’s Sumatra; Raffles’ History of Java; Craufurd’s Indian Archipelago; Papers in Journal of the Indian Archipelago; Sir James Brooke’s writings.
5. Jukes’ Voyage of Fly; McGillivray’s Voyage of Rattlesnake; The Papuans, by Windsor Earl; Works of Collins, King, Mitchell, &c.; Journal of Indian Archipelago; United States’ Exploring Expedition.
6. Travels in Abyssinia by Johnstone, Harris, Mansfield, Parkyns, &c.
7. The Negroes, &c. Medical History of the Niger Expedition, by Dr. McWilliam; On the Natives of Old Calabar, by Dr. Daniell.
8. Licshtenstein’s Travels; Galton in Journal of Geographical Society; The Caffres and Bushmen.