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  2. Australo-Melanesian - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Australo-Melanesian

    The term "Proto-Australoid" was used by Roland Burrage Dixon in his Racial History of Man (1923). In The Origin of Races (1962), Carleton Coon expounded his system of five races (Australoid, Caucasoid, Mongoloid, Congoid and Capoid) with separate origins. Based on such evidence as claiming Australoids had the largest, megadont teeth, this group ...

  3. Mongoloid - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mongoloid

    Coon divided the species Homo sapiens into five groups: Besides the Caucasoid, Mongoloid, and Australoid races, he posited two races among the indigenous populations of sub-Saharan Africa: the Capoid race in the south and the Congoid race. Coon's thesis was that Homo erectus had already been divided into five different races or subspecies.

  4. Negroid - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Negroid

    Illustration of Negroid, Caucasoid, and Mongoloid skulls shown from above (Samuel George Morton, 1839) As historian Edith Sanders writes, "Perhaps because slavery was both still legal and profitable in the United States ... there arose an American school of anthropology which attempted to prove scientifically that the Egyptian was a Caucasian ...

  5. Race, Evolution, and Behavior - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Race,_Evolution,_and_Behavior

    Rushton argues that Mongoloid, Caucasoid and Negroid populations fall consistently into the same one-two-three way pattern when compared on a list of sixty distinctly different behavioral and anatomical traits and variables. [6] Rushton uses averages of hundreds of studies, modern and historical, to assert the existence of this pattern.

  6. Race and genetics - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Race_and_genetics

    He found that the majority of genetic differences between humans (85.4 percent) were found within a population, 8.3 percent were found between populations within a race and 6.3 percent were found to differentiate races (Caucasian, African, Mongoloid, South Asian Aborigines, Amerinds, Oceanians, and Australian Aborigines in his study).

  7. Race (human categorization) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Race_(human_categorization)

    The 1775 treatise "The Natural Varieties of Mankind", by Johann Friedrich Blumenbach proposed five major divisions: the Caucasoid race, the Mongoloid race, the Ethiopian race (later termed Negroid), the American Indian race, and the Malayan race, but he did not propose any hierarchy among the races. [62]

  8. Typology (anthropology) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Typology_(anthropology)

    During the late 19th and early 20th centuries, anthropologists used a typological model to divide people from different ethnic regions into races, (e.g. the Negroid race, the Caucasoid race, the Mongoloid race, the Australoid race, and the Capoid race which was the racial classification system as defined in 1962 by Carleton S. Coon). [1]

  9. Caucasian race - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Caucasian_race

    The Caucasian race (also Caucasoid, [a] Europid, or Europoid) [2] is an obsolete racial classification of humans based on a now-disproven theory of biological race. [3] [4] [5] The Caucasian race was historically regarded as a biological taxon which, depending on which of the historical race classifications was being used, usually included ancient and modern populations from all or parts of ...