The skull collectors2010
race, science, and America's unburied dead
by Ann Fabian
When Philadelphian Samuel George Morton died in 1851, no one cut off his head, boiled away its flesh and added his grinning skull to a collection of crania. It would have been strange, but perhaps fitting, had Mortona's skull wound up in a collector's cabinet, for Morton himself had collected hundreds over the course of a long career.
— from OpenLibrary
4 editions at OpenLibrary