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Bulletins de la Société d Anthropologie de Paris, tome 2, fasc. 4, 1879.—This closing number of the last year's Bulletins contains an interesting paper by M. Jacques Bertilion on the mean
averages of life in the various grades of society among civilised races. His paper refers specially to France, although it supplies some comparative tables deduced from the mortality tables
of other countries, while it principally aims at directing attention to the preyentibility of numerous causes of early death.—M. G. Lagneau, in presenting to the Society the mortality tables
for Belgium, drawn up by Dr. Janssens for 1878, referred to the predominance of phthisis in male subjects in France since 1865–66, females having before that period supplied the larger
number of deaths from pulmonary tuberculosis.—M. Lunier records the results of the official inquiry which, he had been authorised to make in reference to the distribution of epilepsy in the
various departments of France, and with regard to station, age, sex, & c.—M. le Docteur G. Le Bon gives an interesting report of his examination of the curious collection of skulls of
celebrated men, now in the possession of the Paris Museum of Natural History, which is believed to include those of Boileau, Descartes, and Gall, Themeari cranial capacity for the forty-two
skulls, when compared with that of forty-two skulls of modern educated Parisians, was in excess of the difference between the latter and an equal number of negroes.—The present number of the
Bulletins contributes little of importance to the literature of local French palaeontology, the most interesting of such contributions being a paper by M. Mortillet, who reports the
discovery, by M. Perron, of a funereal car with traces of human bones and textile fabrics in the tumulus, or barrow, known as la Motte at Apremont, in Hante-Saône.—M. Verneau describes the
Grotto de Voutré, in La Mayenne, in which a skeleton, believed to belong to the Bronze age, has been, found, while a similar discovery has been made at Queyilly, near Rouen, as also at
Cierges, where fragments of a dolichocephalic cranium of the neolithic type have beerl recovered. M. Millescamps has, moreover, drawn attention to the recent discovery by the Abbé Hamard, at
Hermes (Oise) of cut flints in graves of the Merovingian age. The previous discovery between 1873 and 1875 of upwards of 20,000 flints in the Merovingian cemetery of Caranda has raised the
question, which still awaits solution, whether these flints were deposited with the dead merely as objects with which the living had been most familiar, or whether their presence had any
supposed protective action.—M. Zaborowski has laid before the Society the result of his examination of five Hakka skulls, and communicated the information he had received from M. de
Lagrenée, French Consul at Canton, in regard to the history and pure Chinese origin of the Hakkas, who have in all ages formed the active combative element in the Chinese system, and ha
ve in recent years constituted the kernel of the Taiping rebellion.—The Abbé Durand describes a blonde African race, noticed near Laouga in 1562, and still traceable in Mozambique. —The
original site of the Aryan race has again been brought under discussion by M. Henri Martin, who now inclines to the opinion, supported by M. de Ujfalvy, that a brown brachycephalic Aryan
branch took precedence in Asia of the blonde dolichocephalic Aryans.—The most important paper in the present volume is M. Paul Broca's “Etude des Variations craniométriques, et de leur
Influence sur les moyennes.” To this is appended a valuable series of the means, variations, &c., of the cranial measurement of heads belonging to all countries and various periods.—M.
Ujfalvy explained his views in regard to the opinion put forth by the Swedish anthropologist, Prof. G. Retzius, that Finland is occupied by two distinct races, the true Fin, or Tawaste, and
the Carelian, or Finlander.—M, Emile Soldi, in presenting to the Society his recent work on the proportions of Greek and Egyptian statues, took occasion to refute the opinion advocated by
Dr. Le Bon and M. Broca, that the Greeks followed Egyptian canons of taste in art, and that they took their models from foreigners.—M. Bataillard read a paper on the ancient workers in
metals in Greece, and endeavours to trace in the tinsmiths of Dodona the direct ancestors of the modern Tsiganes, or gipsies.
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