🔖 This historic book may have numerous typos and missing text. Purchasers can usually download a free scanned copy of the original book (without typos) from the publisher. Not indexed. Not illustrated. 1921 edition. Excerpt: ...blondness depicted on the monuments. 25: 25 seq. On the Berbers see Sergi, 4, pp. 59 seq., and Topinard, 3. In regard to the Albanians, Ripley refers to their blondness, on p. 414, as follows: "The Albanian colonists, studied by Livi and Zampa in Calabria, still, after four centuries of Italian residence and intermixture, cling to many of their primitive characteristics, notably their brachy-cephaly and their relative blondness." See also Zampa, 1, and Deniker, 1, for scientific discussions of their physical characters. Giuffrida-Ruggeri gives a summary of the most recent literature on Albania. 25: 20-26: 6. See Beddoe, The Races of Britain, pp. 14, 15 and passim. 26: 18. Beddoe, 4, p. 147. 27: 1 seq. See Ripley, pp. 399-400 for a summary of observations on this point. See also Darwin, Descent of Man, pp. 340-341 and 344 seq.; and Fleure and James, p. 49. 27: 14-28: 19. Haddon, 1, p. 2; also 2; Deniker, 2, chap. II and passim. 28: 19. Davenport, passim; Ripley, passim; and any general book on anthropology. 28: 24-29: 17. Ripley, pp. 80, 81, 84,108-109,131,132, 252, 271, 307. Also see Davenport and Conklin, passim, and the notes to p. 18 of this book. 30:18-31: 8. For a very interesting discussion of this question see Conklin, 2, vol. DC, no. 6, p...