An Introduction to the Study of Social Evolution the Prehistoric Period

Cover An Introduction to the Study of Social Evolution the Prehistoric Period
An Introduction to the Study of Social Evolution the Prehistoric Period
F Stuart Francis Stuart Chapin
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He main- tains that this hypothesis is the simplest and ago^ees with more facts than any other theory of race origin^ He ac- counts for the origin of the Yellow and Black races upon the hypothesis that one contingent of the original non- descript race with a tendency to vary, worked its way into a favorable location, where, in the course of cen- turies, natural selection operated to make it markedly dolichocephalic, frizzly-haired, and black; while another contingent of this original plastic ra...ce with a tendency to vary, worked its way into a favorable location, and there, in accordance with the same selective process, be- came markedly brachycephalic, almond-eyed, lank-haired, and yellow in skin color. AVhile this theory does not take immediate notice of color gradations such as brown, 210 SOCIAL EVOLUTION and red, it gives an admirable distribution geographic- ally, and besides this, gives a correlation between head form and hair form. If now, we substitute Professor Giddings' nomenclature for the popular terms black, white, and yellow, the system of racial classification as- Cimes the following form: /.

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