He presented these data initially in the form that has come to be called a
"Burt table", giving the univariate and bivariate frequencies for an n-way
frequency table.
Burt says: "In all, 217 individuals were examined, about two-thirds of them
males. But, partly to simplify the calculations and partly because the later
observations were rather more trustworthy, I shall here restrict my analysis
to the data obtained from the last hundred males in the series."
Head and Stature reflect a binary coding where people are
classified according to whether they are below or above the average for the
population.