Abstract
THE publication of an intensive study of ‘race’ and attendant problems is a new departure for the Institut de Paleontologie, which the author justifies by his views of its relationship to the objectives of the study of human palaeontology and archaeology. M. Neuville's interpretation of the result of the geographical position of Europe and its function as a terminal point in racial migration is illuminating in relation to the consideration of the origin and distribution of racial characters in that continent.
L'Espèce, la race, et le métissage en anthropologie: introduction à l'étude de ranthropologie générale.
Par Henri Neuville. (Archives de l'Institut de Paléontologie humaine, Mémoire 11.) Pp. iii + 515. (Paris: Masson et Cie, 1933.) 200 francs.
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L'Espèce, la race, et le métissage en anthropologie: introduction à l'étude de ranthropologie générale . Nature 135, 1020 (1935). https://doi.org/10.1038/1351020c0
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DOI: https://doi.org/10.1038/1351020c0