Page:Popular Science Monthly Volume 59.djvu/466

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456
POPULAR SCIENCE MONTHLY.

possibly not far from 96. Likewise the Littorinas from South Kincardineshire, Scotland, have a modal index of 88 and a positive skewness of 0.065; while those of the Humber, having a mode of 91, have a skewness of 0.048. These figures suggest an ancestral index of about 97, or about the same as before. The form of the frequency polygon may thus enable us to infer the ancestral condition of a race or species and may consequently help us to get at the history of the race.

Skewness may, as we have seen, depart to any extent from a nearly symmetrical condition. The extreme case occurs when the mode lies at one end of the range. This case is sometimes found among plants. It indicates that the group has in respect to the character in question reached an extreme condition (Fig. 10).

Complex frequency polygons have various interpretations. We have already seen that one of these interpretations at least is a splitting of one race into two. Another kind of complex polygon is due to

Fig. 12. Complex curve of length in cm. of fasciated stem of 146 individuals of Crepis biennis derived from fasciated ancestors. One individual of 19 centimeters omitted. From de Vries, ’95, Bulletin Scientifique, Tome 27, p. 397. Ordinates, number of individuals; Abscissæ, length of fasciated stem.

differences of age. Suppose an animal that breeds at one restricted season of the year and that annually nearly doubles in size. If we make a collection of a lot of these animals from a place at one time, we shall include individuals of different ages such as, for instance, six months, one year and six months, two years and six months, and so