The Peruvian Cashinahua are an isolate of unmixed American Indians living in four villages in the Southeastern part of the country. Finger dermatoglyphic data were collected from the three most closely grouped villages in the summer of 1966. The relatively low proportion of whorls and high proportio
Finger dermatoglyphics of the Tibetans
โ Scribed by S. C. Tiwari; P. K. Chattopadhyay
- Book ID
- 102702796
- Publisher
- John Wiley and Sons
- Year
- 1967
- Tongue
- English
- Weight
- 505 KB
- Volume
- 26
- Category
- Article
- ISSN
- 0002-9483
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โฆ Synopsis
Finger prints of 156 Tibetan males and 150 females have been analyzed. Whorls are more abundant in Tibetan males (60.24% ) than in females (48.67% >. The index of pattern intensity shows a higher value in males (15.95) than the females (14.65).
The birnanual differences (both in males and females) are not statistically significant for the occurrence of pattern on the digits of the right and left hands. However, the difference between the sexes for the occurrence of patterns on the finger balls, are statistically significant.
Ridge counting was done for each h g e r . O n all fingers, Tibetan males have higher ridge-counts than females. The possible tendency for the right hands to possess higher ridge-counts cannot be demonstrated statistically.
Tibetans show greater affinity with the Southern Mongoloids in the frequency distributions of pattern types on the finger balls. However, a more detailed dermatoglyphic study of all the Mongoloid populations in South East Asia, Central Asia and Far East would yield information of great value in disclosing the palmar pattern distributions among the Mongoloids.
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## Abstract Finger prints of the Bagathas, a dominant endogamous tribal population of Araku Valley in Andhra Pradesh (India) were analysed. They are distributed in Araku, Paderu and Chintapalli agency areas of Visakhapatnam district of A.P. Investigations on finger prints of 235 males and 235 femal