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Date: 3 Jun 1853
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Date: 28 Jul 1942
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Born
3 Jun 1853
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Died
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Sent W.M.F. Petrie to K. Pearson, 13th Aug. [1895].
13 Aug 1895
Description:
‘My dear Pearson,
Many thanks for your notes. It is satisfactory to find a well marked peculiarity of the N.R. [i.e. New Race] to work from. The very small variability points to the homogeneity of the race, which is another good result. But how can you expect a long-head to agree to your suggestion of round heads being the only capable folks? I prefer to point the finger of scorn at the round headed Malays 806, Andanese 821, & American Ondian 839; & take my stand with the Ancient Egyptians than the ancient Anglo Saxons & the Scandinavians. Seriously, I suspect that long heads point to a recent growth of capacity in the race, height & length increasing more readily than width: while round heads mean a fused race or one which has regained a more economic form of skull since its expansion, in short a uniformity of capacity for some ages, be it high or low.
I would suggest to you to take Jarrow’s[?] measures of the Medium skulls (abstracts in Brit. Assoc. 1889?). His general result was that those bodies shewed a mixture of Negro & European type. The presumption is that they were a cross of Negro & New Race. Are their values intermediate between these, in the skulls? In any case they represent the lower class of Egyptian of the earliest historic age.
I should give very little care to Monk’s[?] result. They are probably such a hopeless jumble of ll ages & races in Egypt that it is useless to look for more than a general indication of the bulk-race or climate in such material.
I am glad to hear that the Anatomical Gallery may be used. Only I must look to the weight as two or three tons is in question.
Yours sincerely,
W.M. Flinders Petrie.’
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Sent W.M.F. Petrie to K. Pearson, 13th Nov. 1894.
13 Nov 1894
Description:
[from ‘Naqadah, Upper Egypt’:]
‘My dear Sir,
Thanks for your letter & paper, from which I see what a huge mass of material you must need to get any real result out of such tests. For instance I should have certainly suspected a mixture of two large curved in Plate 4 by the lump & hollow on the right side, but I see you conclude it is practically one. Is it quite certain that such tests, however beautiful mathematically take count fully of the facts?
I am very sorry that I shall not have the advantage of having a pronouncement from you on some of the questions raised in the “Pyramids”; but I leave early tomorrow for Egypt. I will as you suggest keep all the skulls however broken, if their dates are known. Do you know that C.H. Read (Brit. Mus.) was digging up dozens of skeletons[?] in fine condition lately & reburied them all? There was a good chance for a long list of measurements.
Have you tried as a test of the numerical results of mathematical treatment dividing your materially casually into two halves & treating each apart; by working out the result... & tabulating how the resulting elements vary in the smaller, but more checkable groups you would have a fine insight into the extent of variation in the result caused by casual accidents in the figures.
I have found that is a very profitable view to show what uncertainty attends the numerical results. E.g. a group of 100 obs. Should have each 3 times the error of the results from 900 obs. Together: & then uncertainty of the 100 obs. Can be seen by the differences between the results of the groups. It would be nice to see how many of the 12 places of figures would remain the same in some of the results, pp. 98, 102, &c.
I hope you will list up the asymmetrical physical curves & consider what causes may be compounded in them, like the ripple & whirl in the barometer curve. My interest in the matter is brutally practical, & not at all in your aetherial mathematics.
Yours very truly,
W.M. Petrie.’
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Sent W.M.F. Petrie to K. Pearson, 14th June 1895.
14 Jun 1895
Description:
‘My dear Sir,
As to the skulls & skeletons I have no particular wish to divide them, if there be any suitable place where they can be properly preserved. The cloisters at U.C. would not do; for, though dry enough when ventilated, any box or books kept there soon becomes damp, & when the Edwards boxes were there for some months I found that every wettable thing got wet.
My reason for proposing a division was that 50 or 100 were more likely to get properly kept than a huge quanitity of one age, which would be felt afterwards to occupy too great a share of our institution. Prof. Burdon Sanderson made the best suggestion, when we were discussing the matter at Prof. Foster’s last night. This was to make a trust of the whole collection, divide it & let the three trustees keep their eyes on what becomes of the portions in future. He seemed to think that such a course would be the most satisfactory.
Of course in speaking of dividing them I only propose that this should be done for preserving them after a sufficient quantity of measurements have been taken. For any further work, I do not see that their distribution over four or five of the principal museums would make any great bar to further research.
If a proper home can be found for all together, so much the better.
Now I want to know exactly (1) what shall be done now with the boxes? I propose to move them into the Latin room unpack each & stack the skull & bones in the women’s Reading room adjoining.
(2) Who will work on them? Mr Thompson will do some; Dr Walker will also give some weeks in July & August; & Mr Sperrell[?] will help. But who will boss the business? I cannot possible look to it myself having my hands quite full with my 250 other cases.
(3) Who will be responsible for clearing out, repacking, & transfer to final abode? I cannot undertake any responsibility or spare any of my friends for that, as I shall have the very tightest fit to get through my own work & distribute my 250 cases of pottery.
I want to hear your mind about these points, as I have to clear the parties[?] for the Commissioner, which comes just in the midst of our great crush of work.
Yours very truly,
W.M. Flinders Petrie.’
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Sent W.M.F. Petrie to K. Pearson, 1st April 1895.
1 Apr 1895
Description:
‘My dear Sir,
I am very sorry to hear of your illness, & hope that you will be able to move soon to the Mediterranean for a time. Your friend’s kind will to help our skeleton business is most welcome. Of course I shall be only too glad to accept such an offer no matter when we can get the actual cash. June or July will make no difficulty in the matter.
I have just got the letter from my assistant, left to finish up, & he reports many more good things in our excavations. I expect there will be a very general interest in the new race; and I shall have a good chance to boom[?] them, & our work on them, & the skeletons, at the Brit. Assoc.; as I am fixed to preside over Anthropology there this year. It is one of the best opportunities we could have, & I hope that some good results will be worked out in July & August ready for Sept. 11-17.
I hope to see the boxes over by the end of June.
Yours sincerely,
W.M. Flinders Petrie.’
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Sent W.M.F. Petrie to K. Pearson, 1st Feb. 1895.
1 Feb 1895
Description:
[from ‘Naqadah, Upper Egypt’:]
‘My dear Sir,
As I corresponded with you before about the skeleton business I now send you an outline of what is going forward, which please pass on to all who, it may concern.
When I began here I stacked skulls & bones on a broad shelf in my bedroom, with a pleasingly perfect mortuary lying below. Soon I had to stack them in boxes to await packing. Then they overflowed & formed a heap, which encroached on our courtyard until I could hardly get into my room. Now the heap is extending daily & threatening to cut off the entrance to our visitor’s room. The skulls were laid on shelves across the end of the court, but I have now filled all of the ornamental openings of the brick wall. And still every day more come in.
We have cleared over 400 graves, & from them have over 100 good skulls & probably a large part of each of 200 skeletons. Many graves had been anciently plundered & the bones broken up.
Every grave has the contents sketched in position, every bone is marked with the number given to the grave (except ribs & fingers & toes, which go in marked bags); every object & every pot is kept (except the very commonest pottery) & also marked.
So when I return I hope to supply to you this summer about 200 skulls & 400 skeletons, more or less. The bones I propose to have classified all of one kind together; so that all the femurs for instance – will go in a row, each numbered. Thus peculiarities will be more easily seen, & the measuring can be more quickly done. Nearly the whole of this material is of some age & of one race. It belongs to a most unexpected people; a cannibal race occupying upper Egypt about 3000 B.C. There has not been any suspicion of them hitherto, & their pottery has been attributed to the Egyptians. But they were quite distinct & not a single object in their cemetery or town is in the least like any Egyptian product. The full study of them will therefore be a matter of great ethnographic interest. The skulls are very fine, orthoganthous[?], with small hook noses, & strong brows.
I hope that when the boxes arrive in May or June some energetic medical or art students will be encouraged to help in all the sorting and classifying of the bones, so that they can be measured this summer. There are interesting diseases; hunch backs, chalky patches in bones, lateral curved spine, diseased spine patched with added growth joining 6 vertebrae, &c. But I have only seen one fracture, an arm.
You could not have a better lot of material for homogeneousness & age: and I think it deserves to be worked up into a classical memoir in anthropology.
All the bodies are decapitated, & the skulls displaced. In one tomb - a grand one – the human bones were broken & scooped out for marrow & gnawed by teeth. But in general the cannibalism appears to be only ceremonial. I suspect the people were Libyans.
Yours sincerely,
W.M. Flinders Petrie.’
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Sent W.M.F. Petrie to K. Pearson, 27th Oct. [1898].
27 Oct 1898
Description:
‘Dear Professor Pearson,
I am sorry to hear that the finger bones are not sufficiently complete for your measurements. The hands were often broken & disturbed. Some were I know quite complete & preserved, but probably not enough in number for your investigation.
If you think well to let the boxes of bones go to Macalister, by all means. I suppose they will require packing up again to be safe for travelling. If so I will set my man on it. The Skulls you will settle the home of until you have completed all you want. Or would you like tosee of Macalister would do the measures you wish for, & so send them at once?
I have a large quantity of measures of IV-XI dynasty, Ptolemaic, & Roman. We have tabulated all, & are building diagrams with printed number slips then the number of each skeleton, so as to refer to other tables for the same skeleton [diag. here]. Thus any individual skeleton can be traced through all its dimensions in the tables, &the pile of reference numbers opposite each number of millimeters form a curve diagram of frequency. This is a great improvement, mainly due to my friend Mac Iver who did all the work.
I hope to work another early cemetery. If you will describe what classes of measures you may wish taken we will do our best.
Yours very sincerely,
W.M. Flinders Petrie.’
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Sent W.M.F. Petrie to K. Pearson, 2nd March 1913.
2 Mar 1913
Description:
‘Dear Professor Pearson,
Many thanks for your letter. We are at the end of our cemetery work of this year, so I can only report what we are bringing.
About 70 skulls of 1st dynasty, 30 with jaws complete. All were in a fearfully frail state, but by soaking with hard paraffin they are now good as new. There is a tremendous black nigger, & a negress with teeth sloping out flatter than I ever saw them.
10 early skeletons... 1st dyn.
18 late skeletons] complete }
14 late heads with jaws } abt. 300 B.C.
I fear that these are the shorter series for you; but the 1st dynasty heads are a fine haul.
The long bones & skulls as they lay in place were measured by an assistant, about 500 or 600 I should suppose. They were far too settled to move. There will also be 20 or 30 skulls of XIIth dynasty from adjacent work, budget accordingly.
The great find biologically is a pygmy camel of the 1st dynasty, the only example before Roman times. The skull is nearly the present size, the long bones about half the present. Fully adult in all these examples. Please say nothing of this for the present.
I enclose a report [not present], just in case you have not yet got the “American Naturalist” there named[?].
My wife is hard[?] busy at drawing all day, & encloses a line to Mrs Pearson.
Yours very sincerely,
W.M. F. Petrie.’
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Sent W.M.F. Petrie to K. Pearson, 3rd Nov. 1894.
3 Nov 1893
Description:
‘Dear Prof. Pearson,
Thanks for your letter about the skeletons; as they do not carry an [illeg.] each in their jaws to pay their transport to the nearest museum, it will be as well if someone will pay the way for them. I saw Prof. Weldon today & he spoke of the variation committee possibly taking up the matter. So far as I can estimate, the cost of material & transport from Koptos to London would be about 1/6 a skeleton, or 6d a skull. If many were brought I should have to employ a carpenter to make the boxes so costing about 1/3rd more.
My part of the business would be extracting the whole complete, marking, & packing.
In view of the quantity of material which you want I propose to bring every skeleton or skull of which the age can be fixed: and to bring the long bones alone of the rest are not attainable. Jewson[?] was in favour of bringing only long bones & skull; but the rest does not take much room, & there must be a host of details to work in the vertebrae & ribs, wherever any one will organise a study of them.
The total number which we might obtain would be possibly 200 skeletons; but more likely 40 or 50, knowing how often they are smashed in the tombs by falls of rock.
If there is a published diagram of the exact positions of standard measurements, I might as well have it; for often a damaged skull is found which does not seem worth transport, but from which some measures could easily be taken on the spot.
One very striking & obvious classification of skulls is the width of the jaw. About 1/3 of the [illeg.] skulls were too wide for the jaws to fit under the temporal arches; but the greater part of the jaws would reach[?] them. I found it because in my skullery I used to hang up the skulls on nails all round the walls & hitch the jaws across the face.
Yours sincerely,
W.M. Flinders Petrie.’
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Sent W.M.F. Petrie to K. Pearson, 7th March 1895.
7 Mar 1895
Description:
‘My dear Sir,
Your letter is rather a relief to me after that which I received from our friend Weldon, as to the skeletons. I had fully hoped to keep our material together at Univ. Coll. to be worked on. It is, quite apart from sentiment, a matter of importance to me to be able to pick out particular skeletons which I want to exhibit, to look out those with remarkable points so as to track if there is any peculiarity in the tombs of men & women, old & young, deformed persons, &c. Hence to have all the material practically inaccessible to me at Cambridge is not at all what I desire. If therefore it be practicable to receive & deal with them at Univ. Coll. I should much prefer it.
First, as to space, I estimate that we shall fill 40 to 50 cases, each 5 x 1 ½ x 1 ft inside. There will be among them about 300 skulls, & the rest bones. I have kept all bones that are in good state, & some if possible from every tomb – even if only one fragment – to indicate the age.
I wish to get some one accustomed to deal with ossification to go over those which are in good state, estimate the age of each, & then draw a life curve. Of course under 15 or 20 it would be defective; but though the errors of estimating would blur the curve it would yet shew the usual age of death.
Second as to cost. I estimate that the cases will cost 4s each, the packing 1s, the transport 7s, or 12s in all. So 50 cases may cost about £30 in all. If you are inclined to take up the matter, I might also get some help from my friends who fund the cost of excavating; though s they have already provided that part I hardly like to ask them to take all the transport.
So I hope by the time I come back at the end of this month I may hear that we shall be able to deal with all the material ourselves. It will arrive I hope in June.
Two results I have already noticed. The rarity of broken bones; only a thigh when young, an arm, & a rib, out of 500-1000 skeletons. This points to their being a peaceful people. Also the commonness of hunchbacks; about 1% of the bodies having imperfectly developed vertebrae, some with 8 in one piece. This points to some definite fault in the development; perhaps associated with other nervous tensions.
I have kept even pieces of skulls when they were broken up, as there are so many points to study. Has the variation ever been worked out? There may be different racial patterns in the order & position of the branchesl & this brings us as near to the form of the brain itself as we can go. The canals[?] are very deep in some skulls, as much as half their breadth. The more I look at the matter, the more I see that needs examining, & above all examining by a rational system of measurement which should gauge different elements of growth separately. Of that, more when I come.
Very sincerely yours,
W.M. Flinders Petrie.’
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Recipient of K. Pearson to W.M.F. Petrie, 11th Aug. 1895.
11 Aug 1895
Description:
‘Dear Professor Petrie,
Professor Thane tells me that there would be no objection to the skulls etc. of the Libyans(?) being placed temporarily in the gallery of the anatomical museum, there being plenty of room there. This would enable us to keep the material at the College say till Xmas. Mr Thompson has completed a certain number of measurements & would be willing to undertake more next term. I am extremely desirous of taking two special series of measurements myself, but I feel it almost impossible with pressure of other work, accumulated by my long illness, to undertake them before October. I hope you may see your way to allowing the material to remain for the present.
I expect to deal with Mr Thompson’s results next week & will send you at once any points that occur to me. One seems to suggest itself from the one constant I have already determined – namely that your new race is very probably identical with the so-called Mook[?] collection of “Egyptian mummies”. I shall see this better when I have got other constants out, but if my idea is verified, Mook would have anticipated you, had he been less eager to send 400 skulls to Germany and more desirous of knowing what he was digging up. The collection is asserted to be mummies because particles of hair & skin are attached to the bones and they came from Egypt!
But if this should turn out to be the case, where alas! shall I still find any collection of mummy skulls of sufficient extent to determine what the Egyptians themselves were? Or to compare with the New Race?
Yours very truly,
Karl Pearson.’
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Recipient of K. Pearson to W.M.F. Petrie, 12th Aug. 1895.
12 Aug 1895
Description:
‘Dear Professor Petrie,
I hasten to correct my statement of yesterday based on a rough calculation only. The following is the result of this morning’s work:
Cephalic Index
... [calculations for different sets of graves] ...
The probable error of the S.D. being .288 about, there is no doubt that the race in both sets of graves is identical. The constants are indeed in remarkable agreement. Putting all the male crania together we have
... [calculations for ‘New Race’, Mook’s collection]...
Hence it is on the basis of this one measurement exceedingly improbable that the two races are the same.
Mook’s Egyptians(?) are a much more variable race than your Libyans(?). Indeed while both are dolic[h]ocephalic your Libyans(?) possess variability to a degree which places them very low in the scale.
For example I have worked out among other races the following for variability in cephalic index...
... [list ranking skull measurements of different ‘races’ by ‘order of variability’ and ‘order of cephalic index’]...
This list shows your Libyans very near the bottom in both cases. I do not lay much stress on positions of ancient British, Gauls, Scandinavians and Swiss (Pile[?]-dwellers) as I have only been able to get the measurements of very few skulls, but the general result seems a fairly close relationship to the Egyptians & a singularly low place on a scale which appears to correspond somewhat to the scale of civilization of modern races i.e. German near the top & Aino near the bottom. However I must not trouble you more about the matter, only I wanted to correct my too definite statement of yesterday.
Yours very truly,
Karl Pearson.’
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Recipient of K. Pearson to W.M.F. Petrie, 16th Sept. 1906.
16 Sep 1895
Description:
‘Dear Professor Petrie,
I have been so pressed with work the last few days, that I have had no time to sit down & think over your scheme until today. Nor does it seem to me one that admits of discussion by way of a few odd notes on your memorandum. It involves an immense round of highly complex matters, which have been discussed and fought over mathematically and otherwise. I will try and put my points as concisely as possible.
(1) Suppose we have two ‘pure’ races A & B – whatever ‘pure’ may mean. We may take a sample of n of one and m of the other and form a new group without hybridization of the two. I will call this as I have always done a mixture of races. If the two groups conjugate together we have a ‘mixed race’. It is most vital in all these matters to distinguish between a ‘mixture of races’ & a “mixed race”. Illustration. The late Professor Weldon took fawn & white waltzing mice, & albino white mice. If he had killed m of the latter & n of the former & measured say an index character of the femur, he would have had a mixture of races. He crossed these two and got ‘hybrids’. These ‘hybrid’ were again crossed inter se & with the parent races. The children of the hybrids were again crossed inter se & so on down to the 9th generation. Each generation of hybrids or “mixed races” presented special features, and certain points of this I may indicate to you, although the results are not yet published.
(2) Let us consider first a “mixture of races.” If the characters dealt with in both A & B followed a normal curve, then the character in the mixture would follow a normal curve. The solution in this case was given in my first seminar on evolution. There is as far as I am aware no graphical method by which this resolution can be made with even approximate correctness. We tried it very fully in 1895 & the graphical resolution gave nothing at all close to the true components. Further, the probable errors of the resolution are very large & 500 to 1000 individuals must be used to get good results. You will find that in the Phil. Trans. memoir & in a subsidiary memoir in the Phil. Mag. it was applied to a considerable number of cases, excluding the resolution of Reibengräber[?] & Roman’s[?] British Skulls.
But, the method suffers from an a priori hypothesis which is that the frequency distribution of the original races is Gaussian. Now nearly all the chief skull characters, if you take a sufficiently large sample can be demonstrated to diverge sensibly from the Gaussian distribution & what is more the simpler the measurement the more frequently it appears to be non-Gaussian; a compound measurement like stature, because it is compound appears to follow more closely the Gaussian chance distribution than a single bone measurement, or skull measurement such as you describe as having “a single element of growth”.
(2) Your plan was actually used by Professor Weldon & myself on Naples crabs; we found one measurement markedly skew, & I resolved it into two Gaussian components, we naturally suspected that other measurements would now break up into two groups containing the same numbers, but we found that there was no such solution at all, a single Gaussian curve being the answer. In other words a proportion may be dimorphic with regard to one character and not with regard to other characters.
It was perfectly possible to get graphically the two Gaussian curves to describe other series of measurements, e.g. the skew frequency curves for characters in herrings, but mathematical analysis showed that not only these solutions were invalid, but no such solutions at all were valid. That investigation led up to the general recognition that skewness in variation is not necessarily a mark of polymorphism. In the years that have gone by since we have established for organ after organ that with sufficient numbers, there will be found sensible evidence of want of Gaussian distribution. The only reason that many cranial measurements can be represented by a Gaussian distribution is that the probable errors of the constants are so large that you cannot say it differs from the [illeg.]. But I can show that a triangle or bit of various other curves will give equally good results.
(3) Thus even for the case of a “mixture of races” your a priori hypothesis of the German curves is not established. Further assuming it to be true & your material not being a priori known to be a mixture, you may find, as we have done, it is dimorphic with regard to one character & not with regard to the others.
We tried some years ago on the only long series of skulls that we had then available the problem; divide the series into two components – one the males & the other the females – by the very measure you suggest. We have at present a very long series of human femurs & in despair of sexing them, we are going to try this very process again, but I am anything but hopeful of the result, because I hold that other sources of polymorphism quite obscure the dimorphism of sex. And I think this will be so with your crania. There is (i) the doubtful sexing, (ii) the great variety of ages, (iii) the lumping or polymorphism due to whole families buried together. On these grounds I feel sure you will hardly do better than we have done (& the labour of any rigid method is great) & find some of your groups of characters will not break up at all, others will show dimorphism, but will not give the same size of component groups.
As to your idea of getting rid of peakings by large sub-ranges, I do not think it helps matters. Whatever range you take the constants if corrected by Sheppard’s method will be identical & it is from the constants that the final result must be deduced. All we have to note is the size of their probable errors, the exact amount of peakiness does not trouble one.
(4) I now pass to the second problem, which I believe is the one you have at heart, a mixture of races or a hybridisation. Or, what is most probable in your case, a part of the population is a ‘mixed race’ and a part a “mixture of races”. Now surely here before you apply any resolution you must settle how the character you are dealing with is inherited? It may be a case of ‘alternate inheritance’ or of ‘blending’ or partly of one & partly of the other. Or again it may be something entirely different.
Let me illustrate my point. When you cross albino white mice with Japanese parti-coloured fawn both pink eyed, the offspring are all black eyed & in bulk are parti-coloured wild grey with occasional parti-yellow, black, etc. The hybrids have characters wholly unknown to both pure races, which have bred pure for generations! Is it recession or atavism or what? You could not possibly break up such a mixed race into two components, & if you did with regard to coat colour, you could not with regard to eye colour. But to go further, you can cross the hybrids together, and what happens? A new generation arrives – what is termed the “segregation” generation – pink eyes come back, but a large proportion of black eyes remain[,] fawns, blacks, lilacs, chocolates, whole & particoloured [sic] come in, which existed in neither pure race & one of the pure races, albinos, returns also. The hybridisers are teaching us a great deal, much that we know already with regard to human hair & eye colour inheritance bears also on this point. Or, again, take something, I have been dealing with myself. Your pure races are shorthorn cattle (horned, red, white & [illeg.]) & Galloways (polled & black). You cross these two. The hybrids are all black nearly all polled, but a few are “scarred” & have loose horns hanging from the skin, small & short. These can be removed & the whole series of hybrids are (by the dishonest) or might be sold for pure Galloways. So long as you breed them with Galloways you get black polled cattle. Now it is clear that if your character was length of horn, this mixture of races would give you no dimension at all, possibly some bone of the skeleton would give you dimorphism. Thus the amount of dimorphism & the size of your component groups would vary from character to character & your work of resolution would give you impossible results.
Now cross these Galloway skeleton hybrids (a) among themselves, reds & particulars come back, longside blacks; scurs[?] occur more frequently & more rarely horns. (b) cross them with shorthorns, scurs & rarely horns appear again & there are reds & particolours. But (c), as we have seen, if crossed with Galloways the result is the bulk are hornless & black.
Now, I think the results are sufficient to show that when we have a mixed race, the results at first may show polymorphism & not dimorphism, that we have reversion to characters which did not exist in either “pure” race inbreeding, & that the extent of any component of the polymorphic result depends (a) on the particular character with which we are dealing and (b) on the extent to which (i) the cross breeding has been carried and (ii) the amount to which any hybrid generation has been mated with either parent race.
Even if your material proved dimorphic, you must nor expect your individuals for different characters to fall into the same groups, or those groups to be of the same size, for each character. That somewhat similar laws hold not only for such character as I have described, but for bone-characters is, I think, probable. No doubt after continuous hybridisation for many generations, you do settle down for measurable characters to an approximately smooth frequency possible Gaussian in character, but the variation from the double Gaussian of the mixture of the races to the simple Gaussian of a much “mixed race” one whose members have interbred for generations is one we are only now learning something about, and it appears to me highly improbable that at any stage from the first crossing to the complete mingling after so many generations that a Gaussian determination would be the rule.
At any rate you ought before attempting it to know the nature of your inheritance of each character. It seems to me that for a mixed race you are dogmatically assuming that the characters are all (i) alternative & (ii) that if there be a prepotency of one individual for one character, he will be prepotent for all his characters. This is directly contrary to all experience. But without these two assumptions your process of resolution is illegitimate.
To sum up:
Your method might apply to a “mixture of races”, I think it has no application to a “mixed race”. There is no gain in large sub-ranges, if Sheppard’s corrections are made in finding the constants. The reduction would be laborious, especially, as if you found the two components n,1 & n2 for one character & two n1’ & n2’ for another character, you require the probable error of the difference n1-n1’ to determine whether the differences are significant or not.
In some races certain characters are different, others alike, you would not therefore get the same sized components necessarily from each character. When true characters are nearly alike in mean & variability & the latter is nearly the same for all races, any attempt to separate a mixture leads to wild results, the influence of small irregularities being very great.
The method has been attempted before, but has not hitherto been successful; marked dimorphism in one character being found not to be accompanied by any sensible dimorphism in a second.
I am afraid this is very lengthy, but it is the only way I can express my views & I fear will not be helped.
Yours very sincerely,
Karl Pearson.’
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Recipient of K. Pearson to W.M.F. Petrie, 17th June 1895.
17 Jun 1895
Description:
‘My dear Sir,
I have little doubt that the Royal College of Surgeons would be only too glad to take the whole collection & would look well after it, which looking after might be further provided for by the Trust you suggest. I believe the British Museum (Natural History Department) would also undertake the care of the collection with alacrity.
While the College of Surgeons have the best collection in England, the Natural History Museum has the beginning of a collection of negroes & others. If you select either of these bodies as the recipients of what I should think the most valuable anthropological series in existence. I have no doubt they would be perfectly willing to clear out & transfer the collection in August or September.
As you know, I am keen only on certain skull measurements for comparative purposes. I feel I cannot go beyond those at present without opening up a vista of useless work, which I cannot undertake. Had I not had nine weeks illness, were I not still more or less in the Doctor’s hands, I would have given any merely mechanical aid in my power, but I am simply told that my future work depends on me getting away as soon as possible. If the skulls had been kept at the College in a year or so we might have got the whole series of measurements out of them, but it cannot, I fear, be done in a few weeks. To keep the skulls apart from the skeletons would be a great pity, but you conclude that it is impossible to keep the whole collection in the space at the College’s disposal. I should urge therefore the sending of the entire collection to Lincoln’s Inn Fields, where it will be well looked after and accessible to any one from the College, who desires to use it after August.
I am sending a line to the donor of £50 for the transit expenses to remind him that quarter day falls this week. I will tell him to send the cheque directly to you and you will I know realise that he gives the amount of interest in Egypt, and not from any personal relation to me.
Yours very truly,
Karl Pearson.’
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Recipient of K. Pearson to W.M.F. Petrie, [Aug.?] [1895].
Aug 1895
Description:
‘Dear Professor Petrie,
Many thanks for your reference to Garson on Medum skulls, which I shall look up. Flower’s Andamanese measurements I know, but as there are only 12 ♂ crania & 12 ♀ crania, the constants can hardly be satisfactorily determined, at least for my purposes. They are undoubtedly roundheaded, but this is emphasised by Flower’s measurements of length. Can you refer me to any good collection of American Indian skulls? I should be very thankful for a reference.
Next as to Mook. I think his collection is distinctly homogeneous whatever it may be. You use the smallness of the variability in the case of the new race as an argument for homogeneousness (an argument which I think must be very cautiously applied), but Mook’s Egyptians have remarkably small variability also, if not as small as your new race. Then so far as I have gone yet variability in breadth is very sensibly greater than variability in length in all races I have worked out numbers for. Thus German Bavarian peasants, modern Parisians, Libyans(?) and Mook’s Egyptians have a mean length not so very different, but widely different breadths. It seems to me so far then (since breadth also has a high coefficient of variation) that roundheads have been derived from longheads by a selection of breadth rather than length.
I should be especially glad to see data to show that height & length increase more readily than width as you suggest.
Of course it is quite possible for longheads to have come from round by a selection of small breadths. The lengths being the same small breadth might be an advantage at birth, were not indeed longheadedness on this occasion provided by other means!
Yours very truly,
Karl Pearson.’