The Journal of the Anthropological Institute of Great Britain and Ireland, Volym 3Anthropological Institute of Great Britain and Ireland, 1874 Includes articles on issues of worldwide anthropological interest. |
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Sida 13
... remarkable declension , which had been going on for some years before this time , as if the very plague had seized on them . Whole tribes ( some of which Robin- son mentions by name as being in existence fifteen or twenty years before ...
... remarkable declension , which had been going on for some years before this time , as if the very plague had seized on them . Whole tribes ( some of which Robin- son mentions by name as being in existence fifteen or twenty years before ...
Sida 30
... remarkable on account of the small size to which they have been reduced . Though belonging to full - grown individuals , they only measure 11 inches and 9 inches respectively . The process of preparation , according to the account given ...
... remarkable on account of the small size to which they have been reduced . Though belonging to full - grown individuals , they only measure 11 inches and 9 inches respectively . The process of preparation , according to the account given ...
Sida 31
... remarkable speci- men is preserved in the National Collection , to which it was presented by H.R.H. the Prince Consort in 1853. It is only about one inch in height , and fixed to a stick dressed up as a doll . It was discovered in an ...
... remarkable speci- men is preserved in the National Collection , to which it was presented by H.R.H. the Prince Consort in 1853. It is only about one inch in height , and fixed to a stick dressed up as a doll . It was discovered in an ...
Sida 32
... remarkable feature in America was the arrested development due to the cessation of its participation in the great migrations , which culminated in those of the higher races . America shared in what appeared to be the earliest languages ...
... remarkable feature in America was the arrested development due to the cessation of its participation in the great migrations , which culminated in those of the higher races . America shared in what appeared to be the earliest languages ...
Sida 35
... remarkable for its wood- lands , and that those we now know are but the remains of the great primeval forest . We should probably obtain a more accurate notion of the ancient condition of the land , if we care- fully considered the ...
... remarkable for its wood- lands , and that those we now know are but the remains of the great primeval forest . We should probably obtain a more accurate notion of the ancient condition of the land , if we care- fully considered the ...
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The Journal of the Anthropological Institute of Great Britain and ..., Volym 17 Obegränsad förhandsgranskning - 1888 |
The Journal of the Anthropological Institute of Great Britain and ..., Volym 2 Obegränsad förhandsgranskning - 1873 |
The Journal of the Anthropological Institute of Great Britain and ..., Volym 15 Obegränsad förhandsgranskning - 1886 |
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aborigines Agaw Ainos Alans amongst ancient animals Anthropological appear Avars believe Bolghar bones border Bulgarians called Car Nicobar Caucasus cave Chalk escarpment Chaou chief China Chinese civilisation colour Coptic dialect district east Easter Island eastern Egyptian escarpment ethnological evidence exhibited fact feet figure with staff fish flint ground head Heung-noo hills hundred Huns Ibn Haukal inches Indian Ingushes inhabitants Institute Japanese Kafiristan Kafirs Kaitaks Khan Khasi Khazars killed king Klaproth Kumuks Kutrigurs land language latter Lesghian Lower Greensand Maou-tun ments monuments Mordvins mountains natives paper parishes Peruvian Pontnewydd pottery present probably Professor race regard remarkable river Roman Sage prince sand says sent Shen-yu side Sitting figure skulls slabs Society specimens stone thousand cavalry tion tree tribes troops Ugrian Utigurs valley villages Volga Votiaks Weald Weald Clay women wood words