Dr. T. Tóth szerk.: Studia historico-anthropologica (Anthropologia Hungarica 10. Budapest, 1971)
The present author held lectures in Budapest (i960), Helsinki (1965),and Tallin (1970), on the occasion of the First, Second, and Third International Finno-Ugrian Congresses, as well as in Rostock (the Eighth Conference of the Anthropological Section of the German Biological Society ,1966), and in Dushanbe, Tadzikhistan (the Antique Central Asia /Kushana/ Conference organized by the UNESCO and the Soviet Academy of Sciences in 1968). The author participated in two helf-year expeditions in the Soviet Union (1964-1965, 1967-1968), where he lectured on the historico-anthropological and ethnogenetic problems of the first millennia B.C. and A.D., on the anthropological aspects of the origin of the Hungarians, as well as on some problems of the evolution of Man with special regard to Central Asia; the lectures were delivered In the Academic and University Institutes of several Republics (Moscow, Leningrad, Alma-Ata, Chinvali, Dushanbe,Baku, Samarkand, Tbilisi, Ufa, Taskent). K. Éry attended Anthropological conferences in the German Federal Republic (Mainz, 1969). The staff research workers of the Department studied, during the twenty-five years under discussion, the osteological collection not only by the traditional morphometric and morphoscopic program, but conducted also isolate and anthropometric investigations in North Hungary (J. Nemeskéri - A. Thoma, 1961, S. Wenger), and S. Wenger collected metric and pigmentation data from more than a thousand students of the University of Sciences, Budapest, in 1948-1952. M. Malan»s twin - and PTC - investigations should also be mentioned in this place. The present author collected anthropometric, anthroposcopic , dermatoglyphic »Odontologie , and daltonistic data from more than 2500 males in several ethnographic groups in Hungary; and anthropometric and anthroposcopic data from several thousand adults in the area of the Ural Range, Central Asia, and the Caucasus. The dermatoglyphic part of the complex investigations conducted between the Madzhar and As groups, living in the valley of the Kashka-Darya (Uzbekhistan ), has already been published (Gladkova - Tóth, 1970a). Not less important are Gy. Dezsó's studies concerning the problems of puberty and menopause. He also col-