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" ... only the present, but the past distribution of the races of man upon the earth, and the mode and order in which they have been derived from one another. The difficulties in the way of applying zoological principles to the classification of man are... "
Sir William Henry Flower, K.C.B., LL.D., D.C.L., late director of the ... - Page 186
by Charles John Cornish - 1904 - 274 pages
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English Mechanic and World of Science: With which are ..., Volume 34

Industrial arts - 1882 - 650 pages
...of man. The difficulties in the way of applying zoological principles to the classification of mai are vastly greater than in the case of most animals the problem being one of much greater complexity Prof. Flower then gave an epitome of the scienci of anthropology. ABSTEACTS OF REPORTS, PAPERS, &c....
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Report of the ... Meeting of the British Association for the ..., Volume 51

British Association for the Advancement of Science - Science - 1882 - 1050 pages
...anthropologist. The difficulties in the way of applying zoological principles to the classification of man are vastly greater than in the case of most animals ; the problem being, as we shall see, one of much greater complexity. \Vhen groups of animals become so far differentiated...
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The Journal of the Anthropological Institute of Great Britain and ..., Volume 11

Anthropology - 1882 - 634 pages
...another. The difficulties in the way of applying zoological principles to the classification of man are vastly greater than in the case of most animals ; the problem being, as we shall see, one of much greater complexity. When groups of animals become so far differentiated...
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Essays on Museums and Other Subjects Connected with Natural History, by Sir ...

William Henry Flower - Anthropology - 1898 - 426 pages
...another. The difficulties in the way of applying zoological principles to the classification of man are vastly greater than in the case of most animals ; the problem being, as we shall see, one of much greater complexity. When groups of animals become so far differentiated...
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Miscellanies

Charles Bradlaugh - 1899 - 256 pages
...of man are vastly greater than in the case of most animals, the problem being one of much jgreater complexity. When groups of animals become so far differentiated...'they remain isolated; they may break up into further subdivisions—in fact, it is only by further sub-division that new species can be formed; but it is...
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Miscellanies

Charles Bradlaugh - 1899 - 256 pages
...another. The difficulties in the way of applying zoological principles to the classification of man are vastly greater than in the case of most animals, the problem being one of much jgreater complexity. When groups of animals become so far differentiated from each other as to represent...
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