JVc. (of Notes, tfo.)
ground, behind Muss’r-el-Ateeka, on
the desert toward Bussateen: and no
Muslim is interred near a Jew.—G.R.G.
391 Travels in Kordofan, London, 1844.
392 Proceed. Acad. Nat. Sciences, Philada.,
September, 1850, p. 82.
393 Canidæ, i. p. 104.
394 Want of space alone prevents the apposite
citation of the corroborative statements
of M. Hombron, “ De l’Homme dans I
ses rapports avec la Création;” Voyage
au Pole Sud; Zoologie, i. pp. 80-92,
110-7.
395 This is what the Halicarnassian states —
“ I am surprised (for my narrative has
from the commencement sought for
digressions), that in the whole territory
of Elis no mules are able to breed,
though neither is the climate cold, nor
is there any other visible cause. The
Eleans themselves say, ’that mules do
not breed with them in consequence
of a curse ; therefore, when the mares’
breeding approaches, they lead them to
the neighboring districts, and there put
the he-asses with them until they are in
foal ; then they drive them home again.”
(Melpomene, iv. 30 — “ A new and
Literal Version, from the Text of
Baehr’V—- by Henry Cary, M. A., Oxford—
London, 1849, p. 247.)
396 Columella, p. 135.
397 Ham. Smith — Nat. Hist, of the Equidæ,
p . 154.
398 Leidy; in Proceed. Acad. Nat. Sciences,
Phila., Sept., 1847.
399 Equidæ, p. 183.
400 Ibid., p. 120.
401 Morton’s posthumous papers.
402 Ibid. — Replies to the Rev. J. Bachman,
& c ., 1850-51.
403 Buffon, Quadrupèdes, xxii. p. 400; xxx.
p. 230.
404 Chevreul, in Journal des Savans, Juin,
1846; p. 357. It was my good fortune
to have marked, for Dr. Morton, that
passage in Chevreul’s skilful paper
which Dr.Bachman so queerly ascribed to
“ old and musty” authorities.—G. R. G.
405 Karl Ritter’s Geography of Asia ; viii.
Division 1st.—pp. 655, 659. Compare
Frazer, Mesopotamia and Assyria,
pp. 366—7 ; for “ Turkoman Camel.”
406 Canidæ, p. 19.
407 Sonnini’s Buffon, Quad, xxxiii. p. 321,
supp.
408 Pennant’s Arctic Zoology, i. p. 42.
409 Fauna Boreale-Americana, Mamm., p. 61.
410 First Voyage, Supp., p. 186.
411 Fauna, p. 65.
412 Idem, pp. 74, 79.
413 American Edition, p. 365.
414 Martin, Nat. Hist, of the Dog, p. 30.
415 Hamilton Smith, Canidæ, ii. p. 123.
416 Nat. Hist, of Paraguay, p. 151.
417 Rural. Sports, p. 16.
418 Lyeli, Principles, ch. 38.
419 Wood-cut, fig. 235—Champollitfn, Grammaire,
pp. 51, 173; Dictionnaire, pp.
117,127:—Bunsen, Egypt’s Place, i. p.
514, figs. 248, 249:—Wilkinson M. and
C., iii. p. 32: — Lepsius, Denkmäler,
IVth, Vth, and Vlth, dynasty, passim.
420 Wood-cut, fig. 237—Denkmäler, Abth. ii.
Bl. 9.
No. (of Notes, (£c.)
421 Wood-cut, fig. 238—Denkmäler, Abth. ii.
Bl. 96.
422 Wood-cut, fig. 239—Denkmäler, Abth. ii.
Bl. 11: — See varieties in Cailleaud,
Arts et Metiers des Anc, Eg., pi. 37.
423 Wood-cut, fig. 240—Denkmäler, Abth. ii.
Bl. 20.
424 Wood-cut, fig. 241 — Rosellini, M. C.,
xvii., fig. 3.
425 Wood-cut, fig. 242—Martin, Nat. Hist, of
the Dog, p. 138.
426 Oriental Album, pi. 41.
427 Martin, op. cit., p. 53.
428 Wood-cut, fig. 243—Ibid., p. 50 :—Denkmäler,
Abtn> ii. Bl. 132.
439 Wood-cut, fig. 244—Denkmäler, Abth. ii.
Bl. 131.
430 Wood-cUt, fig. 245 — Rosellini, M. C.,
No. 5.
431 Wood-cut, fig. 246—Wilkinson, M. and
C. iii. p. 13.
432 Wood-cut, fig. 247—Ibid., op. cit., p. 32.
433 Hoskins, Ethiopia, Plate i., line 3.
434 Bennett, Tower Menagerie, p. 83.
435 Wood-cut, fig. 248 — Wilkinson, M. and
C. iii. p. 12: — Lepsius, Denkmäler, ii.
131.
436 Wood-cut, fig. 249 — Denkmäler, ii. 134.
437 The head resembles the skulls of Egyptian
mummied-dogs now in the Academy,
Philadelphia.
438 Wood-cut, fig. 250—Denkmäler, ii. 96.
439, and 440 Wood-cut, fig. 251 -*• Layard,
Babylon, p. 526:—Vaux, Nineveh, p.
198 ; discovered by Rawlinson. “ Cte-
sias (says Photius in his Excerpta), in
his description of India, speaks of the
gigantic dogs of that country.’’- “Indica,
cap. 5 ; apud Heeren, Hist. Res.; London,
1846; i. p. 35.
441 Morton, Additional Observations on Hybridity,
Oct., 1850, p. 26.
442 Lepsius, Denkmäler, Abth. ii. Bl. 131,
and Passalacqua, Catalogue, 1826, pp.
231-3.
443 Zoologie, ii. p. 79.:—Another, not less
curious, arrived too late for us to use in
our studies; viz: Courtet de 1’Isle,
“ Tableau Ethnographique du Genre
Humain,” Paris, 1849. We shall revert
to it elsewhere.
Ä4 October, 1849 : —■ Amer. Jour, of Med.
Sciences, Jan., 1850.
445 Thoughts on the Original Unity of the
Human Races, New York, 1830.
446 Zoologie, ii. p. 109.
447 Op. eit«, p. 107.
448 Lyeli, Principles, chap. xxxvii.
449 South. Quar. Rev., Charleston, S. C.f
Jan., 3 846.
450 Second Visit to the United States, i. p. 105.
451 Hist, of Nap'oleon Buonaparte.
452 Notes to Azara’s Quadrupeds, i. p. 24.
453 Amer, ed., No. ccciv, July, 1853, p, 55.
454 Genesis v. 4.
455 Etudes sur l’Algérie, p. 148.
456 Cahen’s Hebrew Text, i. p. 8 : Genesis
ii. 20.
457 Layard, Babylon, p. 623.
4£>8 Pauthier, Chine, p. 24: — Livres Sacrés
de l ’Orient, “ Temps antérieures au
Chou-king,” p. 33.
459 De la Domestication du Llama et de la
Vigogne ; “ Projêt d’une Ménagerie
Nationale d’Acclimatation,” 1848.
No. (of Notes, <£c.)
460 The Black Man, “ Comparative Anatomy
and Psychology of the African Negro”
—transi. Friedlander and Tomes, New
York, 1853, pp. 11-12.
461 Crania Ægyptiaca, 1844. p. 1.
462 Observations on a Second Series of
Ancient Egyptian Crania ; Proceed.
Acad. Nat. Sc., Phila., Oct. 1844, pp.
8- 10. 463 Catalogue of Skulls, 3d ed., 1849: 1 to
whicn ought to be added those crania
presented to him in 1851 by Mr. Glid-
don ; and, in 1851-2, the two shipments
received from Mr. A. C. Harris of
Alexandria, Egypt.
464 Cr. Ægyp., p. 3.
465 Gliddon s Otia, pp. 74-5, 80.
466 Ægyptens Stelle in der Weltgeschichte,
ii. pp. 166-70.
467 Crania Ægyp., p. 19.
468 Observations, &c. Proceed. Acad. Nat. |
Sciences, Phila., Oct. 1844 :—Lepsius,. j
Briefe, p. 33.
469 Crania Ægypt., p. 20.
470 Exodus xii. 38; "Cahen’s Hebrew Text,
ii: p. 50. -
471 Champollion, L’Egypte sous les Pharaons,
1814; ii. p. 5.'seq.: and Quatremère,
Recherches sur la Langue et la Littérature
des Coptés. .
472 Abeken, Rapport à la Société Egyptienne
du Kaire ; in Bulletin de la Soc. de
Géog., Paris, Sept., 1845; pp. 171-2.
473 Lepsius, Auswahl, pl. xx. g as well as in
Briefe, pp. 105-6.
474 Cr. Ægyp., pl. ii. fig. 1.
475 Çr. Ægyp., pl. ii. fig. 2.
476 Cr. Ægyp., pl. ii. fig. 3.
477 Cr. Ægyp., pl. x. fig. 8.
478 Cr. Ægyp., pl. viii. fig. 1.
479 Cr. Ægyp., pl. xi. fig. 1
480 Cr. Ægyp., pl. x. fig. J.
481 Cr. Ægyp., pl. x. figr4.
482 Cr. Ægyp., pl. x. fig. 5. Note to Woodcuts,
figs. 263, 264; “ Ancient Assyrian”
(supra, pp. 426-7). After my remarks
were stereotyped, I had the
pleasure to receive another letter from
Mr. J. B. Davis (dated, Shelton, Nov.
15, 1853), which affords the following,
among other particulars, corroborative
of the authenticity of this cranium : —
* * “ The skull is the veritable
skull of an ancient Assyrian. It was
found with the fragments of others, and
a great many other, bones and armor,
in a chamber of the North-west palaoe
at Nimrpud, to which there was an entrance
but no exit. This is marked in
Mr. Layard’s Nineveh, Vol. I., p. 62;
Plan III., Chamber I. It was supposed
to be the one to which the defenders of
the palace had retreated. * * * * *
The skull is undoubtedly allied to Morton’s
Pelasgic group, but, yet, I think
possesses a distinct character which at
once strikes my eye, as belonging to the
people of the sculptures. The full,
rounded, equable form like the ancient
Greek, only decidedly larger and fuller,
is striking.”—J. C. N.
483 Egypte Ancienne, pl. 2. p. 261.
484 Gliddon, Appeal to the Antiquaries of
Europe on the destruction of the Monuments
of Egypt, 1841 ; pp. 125-129.
No. (of Notes, cêc.)
485 Proceed. Acad. Nat. Sciences, Philadel.,
Dec. 24,1850. On the “ leathern straps,”
cf. Birch in Gliddon’s Otia, p. 85; and
Osburn’s paper on the Leed’s Mummy,
1828; pp. 4, 33-4, pi. ii.
486 Promenade en Amérique, Revue des
Deux Mondes, Juin, 1853.
487 Martin, Man and Monks., p. 298, fig, 233.
488 Op. cit., p. 298.
489 Prichard, Phys. Hist. i. p. 297.
490 Ibid., op. cit. p. 290-. “ Fulah” means
“ white:” Cf. Beecham, Ashantee, or
the Gold Coast: p. 161, note.
491 Ibid., op. cit.; and Latham, Varieties of
Man, p. 6.
492 Morton, Cr. Æg., pi. xii. fig. 7.
493 Virey, Histoire Naturelle du Genre Humain,
i, p. 240 ; pl. 2 : drawn in colors,
on a folio scale, by Geoffroy and Cuvier,
Mammifères, 1829 : i. pl. 1 and 2 ; and
described in pp. 1-7.
494 Morton, Cr. Æg., p. 16.
495 Prichard, Researches, v. p. 3. Thus
amply confirmed by Crawfurd—“ There
are 15 varieties of Oriental Negroes.
* * * * There, is no evidence, therefore,
to justify the conclusion that the
Oriental Negro, wherever found, is of
one and the same race.” (Edin. New
Philos. Jour., 1853. p. 78.—“ Negroes
of the Ind. Archip.” )
496 Churchill’s Collection of Voyages, i. ;
“ History of Navigation, supposed to
have been written by the celebrated
Locke.” This information may be
relied on, as it was furnished me by Dr.
Charles Pickering.—G. R. G.
497 Anthropologie, p. 348.
498 Op. cit.; from “ Voyage de l’Uranie.”
499 Morton, Catalogue, 1849, No. 1327.
500 Prichard, Researches, i. p. 298, fig. 7.
501 Dumoutier, Atlas, pi. 35, fig. 6.
502 Ibid., pi. 37, fig.*2.
503 Martin, Man and Monkeys, p. 310, fig.
227. m I
504 Dumoutier. Atlas, pi. 36, fig. 4—“ Van
Diemen.”
505 Prichard, Researches, i. p. 297, fig. 6.
506 Dumoutier, Atlas, pi. 36, fig..*2 — “ Van
Diemen.”
507 Op. cit., pi. 34.
508 Martin, Man and Monkeys, p. 312, fig.
229. There is nothing herein stated
about the almost inconceivable animal-
ity of Papuans, Ahetas (Ajetas) or
Negritos, Arruans, A1 Foers, which the
reader cannot find in a new work-r-
“ Ethnographical Library, Conducted
by Edwin Norris, Esq., Vol. I. The
Native Races of the Indian Archipelago,
by George Windsor Earl,” London,
1853.
509 Observations faites pendant le 2me voyage
de Cook, p. 208.
510 Mcerenhout, — , ii. p. 248 ; cited by
D’Eichthal, “ Races Océaniennes et
Américaines,” 1845.
511 Polynesian Researches, ii. p. 13.
512 Dumoutier, pi. 26, fig. 6 — “ Cavernes
sepulchrales - Teneriffe.”
513 Ibid., pi. 29, fig. •*- “ Marquesas.”
514 Ibid., pi. 30, fig. 4—“ Caverne ossuaire—
Taiti.”
515 Ibid., if f 31, fig.-4-r “ Sepultures abandonnées—
Isle Vavao.”