Table des tableaux et figures
Tableau I. Fréquence de l'albinisme dans diverses populations du sud-ouest des États-Unis (d'après Woolf, 1965).
Tableau II. Distribution of Anthropometric Measurements in Female Latin American Indians
Tableau III. Distribution of Anthropometric Measurements in Male Latin American Indians
Tableau IV. Distribution de la stature et de l'indice céphalique chez les esquimaux (d'après Jenness, 1923, et Auger et coll., 1977)
Tableau V. Stature and cephalic index of North American indians, by tribes (from Boas)
Tableau VI. Nutritional value of the adult eskimo daily diet in 1855 (From Sinclair)
Tableau VII. Surface area (m2) of different parts of body in Eskimos and White
Tableau VIII. Surface area of different parts of the body in per cent of the total surface area
Tableau IX. Évolution des principaux groupes ethniques d'origine de la population du Canada 1871-1971 (d'après les recensements).
Tableau X. Nombre de fondateurs et de parents dans les colonies hutterites (d'après A.O. Martin, Am. J. Phys. Anth., 1970, 32 : p 354 et 358)
Figure 1. Body height, weight, and WI : Ht2 index of Indian native children as compared with similar observations in other Races. Solid dotted lines correspond to the natives. The letters represent the following observations : A, (Stewart), American children. B (Cometto), Argentinian children. C, (Bowditch), American children." "In Furtado A. Respiratory Adaptation in the Indian Natives of the Peruvian Andes. 7- 164.A. J. Phys. Anthrop. 1932- 33, 17, 13.
Figure 2. Croissance en poids et taille chez les Quechua. In Boyce et coll. Respiratory function in Peruvian Quecha Indians. 1974. Ann. of Biol. 1, 137-144.
Figure 3. Increased aerobic capacity associated with small body size among high-altitude Quechua natives.
Figure 4. Amérique du Sud
Figure 5. Les quatre périodes de l'immigration en Amérique (in P. Chaunu. L'Amérique et les Amériques, A. Colin, 1964).
Figure 6. Distribution about the population mean of the Frequencies of the M allele in : a) forty-four S-leut colonies ; b) thirty-three L-leut colonies.
Figure 7. Diagrammatic representation in terms of "distance" of four populations from one another. A. According to morphological criteria. B. According to indexes computed from allele frequencies for blood groups and hemoglobin types. In Pollitzer, The Negroes of Charleston, Am. J. Phys. Anthrop. 16, 241-263, 1958.
Figure 8. Distribution of F values (proportional to the diameters of the circumferences) in different Brazilian populations (dioceses and archidioceses). Note, however, that a comparison between the areas of the several circumferences will give a biased view since the area of a circle grows exponentially in relation to the diameter. (Data of N. Freire-Maia, some still unpublished ; and Amer. J. Hum. Genet., 4 : 194, 1952, and 9 : 284, 1957.) In F. M. Salzano et N. Freire-Maia. Problems in human biology, 1970.
Figure 9. Changing racial composition (in Clarke C., Jamaica in maps, Una of London Press, 1974).
Figure 10. Birth rates for Mormons (top), Utah (middle), and the United States (bottom), 1920-1970. In I.C. Spicer et S.O. Gustavus, 1974. Mormon, fertility through half a Century : another test of the Americanization hypothesis. Social Biology, 21, 70-76.
Figure 11. Évolution comparée de la population en Amérique et dans le monde (in P. Chaunu. L'Amérique et les Amériques, A. Colin, 1964). |