Physiological reactions to cold of Bushmen, Bantu, and Caucasian males

Abstract
Two separate studies of the reactions to cold of one sample of 8 and one sample of 15 Kalahari Bushmen were made in their natural habitat and the results compared with the Bantu and, to a smaller extent, with the Caucasians. With a decrease in temperature from 27 to 5 C the metabolisms of all three groups rose. Metabolic rates per square meter of Bantu and Bushmen were similar, although higher than those of the Caucasians, but the percentage increases were closely similar for all groups. Rectal temperatures of Bushmen and Bantu were similar and decreased as the temperature dropped, while that of the Caucasians rose. Toe and finger temperatures of the Bushmen were higher over the whole temperature range than those of the Bantu and Caucasians, while the average skin temperatures were closely similar. Metabolic rates and rectal temperatures, therefore, indicate that subcutaneous tissue insulation against heat flow is greater for the Caucasians than for the Bantu or the Bushmen. Measurements of average skinfold thicknesses confirm this finding. Bushmen and Bantu reactions are quantitatively similar, but are qualitatively slightly different. From these findings we conclude that the difference between Bushmen, Bantu, and Caucasians is essentially morphological. desert and "river" Bushmen in the heat; effect of morphology on reaction to heat; heat reactions of Bantu and Bushmen; state of acclimatization to heat of Bushmen and Bantu; sweat rates of Bantu and Bushmen in standard heat conditions Submitted on October 21, 1963

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