| 
    
(Photographic Supplement, Plate 25)  
    
 
The Mediterranean Reëmergence 
in Great Britain
  
     
    The Atlanto-Mediterraneans were not the only members of the Mediterranean 
    stock to invade Great Britain; smaller Mediterraneans are commonest in Wales 
    and in the  former Cymric territory which stretches from the Midlands 
    to Glasgow. With the rise of the industrial revolution, the population 
    increased greatly in these two last named regions, which became the most 
    heavily industrialized areas in Britain; hence the Mediterranean increment 
    in the British population has risen during the last century and a half.  
     
    FIG. 1 (3 views). A Lancastrian from Blackburn, a slender, 
    delicaltely built Mediterranean with an extremely narrow nose and mandible. 
    He represents a characteristic Midlands type. 
    
    
      
    FIG. 2 (3 views). A metrically similar New Englander from a 
    Massachusetts coastal city, of Colonial Yankee lineage. He represents, a 
    reëmergence or survival within the New England stock of the same British 
    Mediterranean element. 
      
    FIG. 3 (3 views). A Welshman from the neighborhood of Cardiff. An 
    absolutely great head length, a heavier facial structure, and a less 
    leptorrhine nose form indicate a different Mediterranean sub-type from the 
    two above. 
      
    FIG. 4 (3 views). A Mediterranean Scotsman from Paisley; typical 
    of the industrial population of the Glasgow district. 
     
  |