[100] Journal of the Ethnological Society of London, vol. ii. New Series, No. 1, April 1870, p. 45, pl. vii. fig. 3.
[101] Nilsson’s “Stone Age,” translated by Sir J. Lubbock.
[102] These are merely samples of the large number of human skulls and bones which were discovered.
[103] Amongst the Keiss crania described by Prof. Huxley, this most closely resembles his No. 5; but it is of the same type as No. 3 and No. 7, and not very far from that of the Towyn-y-capel cranium, through which the transition to the Mewslade form (“Nat. Hist. Rev.” vol. i. p. 174, pl. v.) is very easy.
[104] The forms most closely resembling this skull amongst those from Keiss are Nos. 3 and 7.
[105] Déformation du crâne resultant de la méthode la plus générale de couvrir la tête des enfans. Paris, 1834.
[106] Essai sur les déformations artificielles du crâne, par L. A. Gosse, de Genève. Paris, 1855.
[107] Recherches sur quelques déformations du crâne observées dans le Département des Deux-Sêvres (“Ann. Médico-psychologique”). Paris, 1852.
[108] This index is obtained by dividing the least circumference by the length of the bone.
[109] “Mémoires sur les ossemens des Eyzies.” Paris, 1868. “On the Human Skulls and Bones found in the Cave of Cro-magnon,” Reliquiæ Aquitanicæ, p. 97.