Title: Men of the Old Stone Age: Their Environment, Life and Art
Author: Henry Fairfield Osborn
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Language: English
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THEIR ENVIRONMENT, LIFE AND ART
HITCHCOCK LECTURES OF THE UNIVERSITY OF CALIFORNIA, 1914
Pl. I. Neanderthal man at the station of Le Moustier, overlooking the valley of the Vézère, Dordogne. Drawing by Charles R. Knight, under the direction of the author.
MEN OF
THE OLD STONE AGE
THEIR ENVIRONMENT, LIFE
AND ART
BY
HENRY FAIRFIELD OSBORN
SC.D. PRINCETON, HON. LL.D. TRINITY, PRINCETON, COLUMBIA, HON. D.SC. CAMBRIDGE
HON. PH.D. CHRISTIANIA
RESEARCH PROFESSOR OF ZOOLOGY, COLUMBIA UNIVERSITY
VERTEBRATE PALÆONTOLOGIST U. S. GEOLOGICAL SURVEY, CURATOR EMERITUS OF VERTEBRATE
PALÆONTOLOGY IN THE AMERICAN MUSEUM OF NATURAL HISTORY
ILLUSTRATIONS BY
UPPER PALÆOLITHIC ARTISTS
AND
CHARLES R. KNIGHT, ERWIN S. CHRISTMAN
AND OTHERS
NEW YORK
CHARLES SCRIBNER'S SONS
1915
Copyright, 1915, BY
CHARLES SCRIBNER'S SONS
Published November, 1915
DEDICATED
TO
MY DISTINGUISHED GUIDES THROUGH THE UPPER
PALÆOLITHIC CAVERNS OF
THE PYRENEES, DORDOGNE, AND THE CANTABRIAN MOUNTAINS OF SPAIN
ÉMILE CARTAILHAC
HENRI BREUIL
HUGO OBERMAIER
This volume is the outcome of an ever-memorable tour through the country of the men of the Old Stone Age, guided by three of the distinguished archæologists of France, to whom the work is gratefully dedicated. This Palæolithic tour[A] of three weeks, accompanied as it was by a constant flow of conversation and discussion, made a very profound impression, namely, of the very early evolution of the spirit of man, of the close relation between early human environment and industry and the development of mind, of the remote antiquity of the human powers of observation, of discovery, and of invention. It appears that men with faculties and powers like our own, but in the infancy of education and tradition, were living in this region of Europe at least 25,000 years ago. Back of these intelligent races were others, also of eastern origin but in earlier stages of mental development, all pointing to the very remote ancestry of man from earlier mental and physical stages.
Another great impression from this region is that it is the oldest centre of human habitation of which we have a complete, unbroken record of continuous residence from a period as remote as 100,000 years corresponding with the dawn of human culture, to the hamlets of the modern peasant of France of A. D. 1915. In contrast, Egyptian, Ægean, and Mesopotamian civilizations appear as of yesterday.
The history of this region and its people has been developed chiefly through the genius of French archæologists, beginning with Boucher de Perthes. The more recent discoveries, which have come in rapid and almost bewildering succession since the foundation of the Institut de Paléontologie humaine, have been treated in a number of works recently published by some of the experienced archæologists of England, France, and Germany. I refer especially to the Prehistoric Times of Lord Avebury, to the Ancient Hunters of Professor Sollas, to Der Mensch der Vorzeit of Professor Obermaier, and to Die diluviale Vorzeit Deutschlands of Doctor R. R. Schmidt. Thus, on receiving the invitation from President Wheeler to lecture upon this subject before the University of California, I hesitated from the feeling that it would be difficult to say anything which had not been already as well or better said. On further reflection, however, I accepted the invitation with the purpose of attempting to give this great subject a more strictly historical or chronological treatment than it had previously received within the limits of a popular work in our own language, also to connect the environment, the animal and human life, and the art.
This element of the time in which the various events occurred can only be drawn from a great variety of sources, from the simultaneous consideration of the geography, climate, plants and animals, the mental and bodily development of the various races, and the industries and arts which reflect the relations between the mind and the environment. In more technical terms, I have undertaken in these lectures to make a synthesis of the results of geology, palæontology, anthropology, and archæology, a correlation of environmental and of human events in the European Ice Age. Such a synthesis was begun many years ago in the preparation of my Age of Mammals, but could not be completed until I had gone over the territory myself.
The attempt to place this long chapter of prehistory on a historical basis has many dangers, of which I am fully aware. After weighing the evidence presented by the eminent authorities in these various branches of science, I have presented my conclusions in very definite and positive form rather than in vague or general terms, believing that a positive statement has at least the merit of being positively supported or rebutted by fresh evidence. For example, I have placed the famous Piltdown man, Eoanthropus, in a comparatively recent stage of geologic time, an entirely opposite conclusion to that reached by Doctor A. Smith Woodward, who has taken a leading part in the discovery of this famous race and has concurred with other British geologists in placing it in early Pleistocene times. The difference between early and late Pleistocene times is not a matter of thousands but of hundreds of thousands of years; if so advanced a stage as the Piltdown man should definitely occur in the early Pleistocene, we may well expect to discover man in the Pliocene; on the contrary, in my opinion even in late Pliocene times man had only reached a stage similar to the Pithecanthropus, or prehuman Trinil race of Java; in other words, according to my view, man as such chiefly evolved during the half million years of the Pleistocene Epoch and not during the Pliocene.
This question is closely related to that of the antiquity of the oldest implements shaped by the human hand. Here again I have adopted an opinion opposed by some of the highest authorities, but supported by others, namely, that the earliest of these undoubted handiworks occur relatively late in the Pleistocene, namely, about 125,000 years ago. Since the Piltdown man was found in association with such implements, it is at once seen that the two questions hang together.
This work represents the co-operation of many specialists on a single, very complex problem. I am not in any sense an archæologist, and in this important and highly technical field I have relied chiefly upon the work of Hugo Obermaier and of Déchelette in the Lower Palæolithic, and of Henri Breuil in the Upper Palæolithic. Through the courtesy of Doctor Obermaier I had the privilege of watching the exploration of the wonderful grotto of Castillo, in northern Spain, which affords a unique and almost complete sequence of the industries of the entire Old Stone Age. This visit and that to the cavern of Altamira, with its wonderful frescoed ceiling, were in themselves a liberal education in the prehistory of man. With the Abbé Breuil I visited all the old camping stations of Upper Palæolithic times in Dordogne and noted with wonder and admiration his detection of all the fine gradations of invention which separate the flint-makers of that period. With Professor Cartailhac I enjoyed a broad survey of the Lower and Upper Palæolithic stations and caverns of the Pyrenees region and took note of his learned and spirited comments. Here also we had the privilege of being with the party who entered for the first time the cavern of Tuc d'Audoubert, with the Comte de Bégouen and his sons.
In the American Museum I have been greatly aided by Mr. Nels C. Nelson, who has reviewed all the archæological notes and greatly assisted me in the classification of the flint and bone implements which is adopted in this volume.
In the study of the divisions, duration, and fluctuations of climate during the Old Stone Age I have been assisted chiefly by Doctor Chester A. Reeds, a geologist of the American Museum, who devoted two months to bringing together in a comprehensive and intelligible form the results of the great researches of Albrecht Penck and Eduard Brückner embraced in the three-volume work, Die Alpen im Eiszeitalter. The temperatures and snow-levels of the Glacial Epoch, which is contemporaneous with the Old Stone Age, together with the successive phases of mammalian life which they conditioned, afford the firm basis of our chronology; that is, we must reckon the grand divisions of past time in terms of Glacial and Interglacial Stages; the subdivisions are recorded in terms of the human invention and progress of the flint industry. I have also had frequent recourse to The Great Ice Age and the more recent Antiquity of Man in Europe of James Geikie, the founder of the modern theory of the multiple Ice Age in Europe.
It is a unique pleasure to express my indebtedness to the Upper Palæolithic artists of the now extinct Crô-Magnon race, from whose work I have sought to portray so far as possible the mammalian and human life of the Old Stone Age. While we owe the discovery and early interpretation of this art to a generation of archæologists, it has remained for the Abbé Breuil not only to reproduce the art with remarkable fidelity but to firmly establish a chronology of the stages of art development. These results are brilliantly set forth in a superb series of volumes published by the Institut de Paléontologie humaine on the foundation of the Prince of Monaco; in fact, the memoirs on the art and industry of Grimaldi, Font-de-Gaume, Altamira, La Pasiega, and the Cantabrian caves of Spain (Les Cavernes de la Région Cantabrique), representing the combined labors of Capitan, Cartailhac, Verneau, Boule, Obermaier, and Breuil, mark a new epoch in the prehistory of man in Europe. There never has been a more fortunate union of genius, opportunity, and princely support.
In the collection of materials and illustrations from the vast number of original papers and memoirs consulted in the preparation of this volume, as well as in the verification of the text and proofs, I have been constantly aided by one of my research assistants, Miss Christina D. Matthew, who has greatly facilitated the work. I am indebted also to Miss Mabel R. Percy for the preparation and final revision of the manuscript. From the bibliography prepared by Miss Jannette M. Lucas, the reader may find the original authority for every statement which does not rest on my own observation or reflection.
Interest in human evolution centres chiefly in the skull and in the brain. The slope of the forehead and the other angles, which are so important in forming an estimate of the brain capacity, may be directly compared throughout this volume, because the profile or side view of every skull figured is placed in exactly the same relative position, namely, on the lines established by the anatomists of the Frankfort Convention to conform to the natural pose of the head on the living body.
In anatomy I have especially profited by the co-operation of my former student and present university colleague Professor J. Howard McGregor, of Columbia, who has shown great anatomical as well as artistic skill in the restoration of the heads of the four races of Trinil, Piltdown, Neanderthal, and Crô-Magnon. The new reconstruction of the Piltdown head is with the aid of casts sent to me by my friend Doctor A. Smith Woodward, of the British Museum of Natural History. The problem of reconstruction of the Piltdown skull has, through the differences of interpretation by Smith Woodward, Elliot Smith, and Arthur Keith, become one of the causes célèbres of anthropology. On the placing of the fragments of the skull and jaws, which have few points of contact, depends the all-important question of the size of the brain and the character of the profile of the face and jaws. In Professor McGregor's reconstruction different methods have been used from those employed by the British anatomists, and advantage has been taken of an observation of Mr. A. E. Anderson that the single canine tooth belongs in the upper and not in the lower jaw. In these models, and in all the restorations of men by Charles R. Knight under my direction, the controlling principle has been to make the restoration as human as the anatomical evidence will admit. This principle is based upon the theory for which I believe very strong grounds may be adduced, that all these races represent stages of advancing and progressive development; it has seemed to me, therefore, that in our restorations we should indicate as much alertness, intelligence, and upward tendency as possible. Such progressive expression may, in fact, be observed in the faces of the higher anthropoid apes, such as the chimpanzees and orangs, when in process of education. No doubt, our ancestors of the early Stone Age were brutal in many respects, but the representations which have been made chiefly by French and German artists of men with strong gorilla or chimpanzee characteristics are, I believe, unwarranted by the anatomical remains and are contrary to the conception which we must form of beings in the scale of rapidly ascending intelligence.
Henry Fairfield Osborn.
American Museum of Natural History
June 21, 1915.
| PAGE | ||
| INTRODUCTION | ||
| Greek conceptions of man's origin | 1 | |
| Rise of anthropology | 3 | |
| Rise of archæolgy | 10 | |
| Geoligic history of man | 18 | |
| Geographic changes | 34 | |
| Climatic changes | 37 | |
| Migrations of mammals | 42 | |
| CHAPTER I | ||
| Ancestry of the anthropoid apes | 49 | |
| Pliocene climate, forests, and life | 60 | |
| Transition to the Pleistocene | 62 | |
| The first glaciation | 64 | |
| The First Interglacial Stage | 66 | |
| Early Pleistocene fauna | 69 | |
| The Trinil race | 73 | |
| Eoliths, or primitive flints | 84 | |
| The second glaciation | 86 | |
| The Second Interglacial Stage | 90 | |
| The Heidelberg race | 95 | |
| Migrations of the reindeer | 102 | |
| The third glaciation | 104 | |
| CHAPTER II | ||
| Date of the Pre-Chellean industry | 107 | |
| Geography and climate | 116 | |
| The river-drift stations | 119 | |
| Pre-Chellean industry | 126 | |
| The Piltdown race | 130 | |
| Mammalian life | 144 | |
| Chellean industry | 148 | |
| Chellean geography | 154 | |
| Palæolithic stations of Germany | 159 | |
| Acheulean industry | 161 | |
| The use of fire | 165 | |
| Acheulean industry | 166 | |
| The second period of arid climate | 173 | |
| Late Acheulean implements | 177 | |
| The Neanderthal race of Krapina | 181 | |
| CHAPTER III | ||
| Close of the Third Interglacial | 186 | |
| The Fourth Glacial Stage | 188 | |
| Arctic tundra life | 190 | |
| Environment of the Neanderthal race | 196 | |
| Mammals hunted by the Neanderthals | 202 | |
| Cave life | 211 | |
| The Neanderthal race | 214 | |
| Mousterian industry | 244 | |
| Disappearance of the Neanderthals | 256 | |
| CHAPTER IV | ||
| Opening of the Upper Palæolithic | 260 | |
| The Grimaldi race | 264 | |
| Arrival of the Crô-Magnons | 269 | |
| Upper Palæolithic cultures | 275 | |
| Upper Palæolithic races | 278 | |
| Geography and climate | 279 | |
| Mammalian life | 284 | |
| The Crô-Magnon race | 289 | |
| Burial customs | 303 | |
| Aurignacian industry | 305 | |
| The birth of art | 315 | |
| Origin of the solutrean culture | 330 | |
| Human fossils | 333 | |
| The Brünn race | 334 | |
| Solutrean industry | 338 | |
| Solutrean art | 347 | |
| CHAPTER V | ||
| Origin of the Magdalenian culture | 351 | |
| Magdalenian culture | 354 | |
| Magdalenian climate | 360 | |
| Mammalian life | 364 | |
| Human fossils | 376 | |
| Magdalenian industry | 382 | |
| Upper Palæolithic art | 392 | |
| Magdalenian engravings | 396 | |
| Magdalenian painting | 408 | |
| Art in the caverns | 409 | |
| Polychrome painting | 414 | |
| Magdalenian sculpture | 427 | |
| Extent of the Magdalenian culture | 434 | |
| Decline of the Magdalenian culture | 449 | |
| Crô-Magnon descendants | 451 | |
| CHAPTER VI | ||
| Close of the Old Stone Age | 456 | |
| Invasion of new races | 457 | |
| Mas d'Azil | 459 | |
| Fère-en-Tardenois | 465 | |
| Azilian-Tardenoisian culture | 466 | |
| Mammalian life | 468 | |
| Azilian-Tardenoisian industry | 470 | |
| The burials at Ofnet | 475 | |
| The new races | 479 | |
| Ancestry of European races | 489 | |
| Transition to the Neolithic | 493 | |
| Neolithic culture | 496 | |
| Neolithic fauna | 498 | |
| Prehistoric and historic races of Europe | 499 | |
| Conclusions | 501 | |
| APPENDIX | ||
| NOTE | ||
| I. | Lucretius and Bossuet on the early evolution of man | 503 |
| II. | Horace on the early evolution of man | 504 |
| III. | Æschylus on the early evolution of man | 505 |
| IV. | 'Urochs' or 'Auerochs' and 'Wisent' | 505 |
| V. | The Crô-Magnons of the Canary Islands | 506 |
| VI. | The Length of Postglacial time and the antiquity of the Aurignacian culture |
510 |
| VII. | The most recent discoveries of anthropoid apes and supposed ancestors of man in India |
511 |
| VIII. | Anthropoid apes discovered by Carthaginian navigators | 511 |
| Bibliography | 513 | |
| Index | 533 | |
| Plate I. | Neanderthal man at the grotto of Le Moustier (in tint) | Frontispiece |
| PAGE | ||
| Plate II. | Discovery sites of the type specimens of human and prehuman races (in color) | facing 19 |
| Plate III. | Pithecanthropus, the ape-man of Java | 87 |
| Plate IV. | The Piltdown man | 145 |
| Plate V. | The Neanderthal man of La Chapelle-aux-Saints | 203 |
| Plate VI. | The 'Old Man of Crô-Magnon' | 273 |
| Plate VII. | Crô-Magnon artists in the cavern of Font-de-Gaume (in tint) | 358 |
| Plate VIII. | Bison painted by Palæolithic artists in the cavern of Altamira (in color) | 414 |
| FIG. | ||
| 1. | Modern, Palæolithic, and chimpanzee skulls compared | 8 |
| 2. | Skull and brain of Pithecanthropus, the ape-man of Java | 9 |
| 3. | Three great types of flint implements | 11 |
| 4. | Evolution of the lance-point | 15 |
| 5. | Map—Type stations of Palæolithic cultures | 16 |
| 6. | Section—Terraces of the River Inn near Scharding | 25 |
| 7. | Section—Terraces of the River Rhine above Basle | 26 |
| 8. | Section—Terraces of the River Thames near London | 28 |
| 9. | Magdalenian loess station of Aggsbach in Lower Austria | 29 |
| 10. | Section of the site of the Neanderthal cave | 31 |
| 11. | Sections showing the formation of the typical limestone cavern | 32 |
| 12. | Map—Europe in the period of maximum continental elevation | 35 |
| 13. | Section showing snow-lines and sea-levels of the Glacial Epoch | 37 |
| 14. | Chronological chart—Great events of the Glacial Epoch | 41 |
| 15. | Zoogeographic map | 45 |
| 16. | The gibbon | 50 |
| 17. | The orang | 51 |
| 18. | The chimpanzee, walking | 52 |
| 19. | The chimpanzee, sitting | 53 |
| 20. | The gorilla | 55 |
| 21. | Median sections of the heads of a young gorilla and of a man | 56 |
| 22. | Side view of a human brain of high type | 57 |
| 23. | Outlines of typical human and prehuman brains (side view) | 58 |
| 24. | Outlines of typical human and prehuman brains (top view) | 59 |
| 25. | Map—Europe during the Second Glacial Stage | 65 |
| 26. | The musk-ox | 66 |
| 27. | The giant deer (Megaceros) | 68 |
| 28. | The sabre-tooth tiger (Machærodus) | 70 |
| 29. | Restoration of Pithecanthropus, the Java ape-man | 73 |
| 30. | Discovery site of Pithecanthropus | 74 |
| 31. | Section of the volcano of Lawoe and the valley of the Solo River | 75 |
| 32. | Map—Solo River and discovery site of Pithecanthropus | 75 |
| 33. | Section of the Pithecanthropus discovery site | 76 |
| 34. | Skull-top of Pithecanthropus, top and side views | 77 |
| 35. | Head of chimpanzee, front and side views | 78 |
| 36. | Restoration of Pithecanthropus skull, side view | 79 |
| 37. | Restoration of Pithecanthropus skull, three views | 80 |
| 38. | Pithecanthropus, the Java ape-man, side view | 81 |
| 39. | Pithecanthropus, the Java ape-man, front view | 82 |
| 40. | Side view of a human brain of high type | 83 |
| 41. | Outlines of human and prehuman brains, side and top views | 84 |
| 42. | The hippopotamus and the southern mammoth | 92 |
| 43. | Merck's rhinoceros and the straight-tusked elephant | 93 |
| 44. | Map—Geographic distribution of Merck's rhinoceros, the hippopotamus, and the straight-tusked elephant | 94 |
| 45. | Section of the Heidelberg discovery site | 96 |
| 46. | The sand-pit at Mauer, discovery site of the Heidelberg man | 97 |
| 47. | The Heidelberg jaw | 98 |
| 48. | Jaws of an Eskimo, of an orang, and of Heidelberg (side view) | 99 |
| 49. | Jaws of an Eskimo, of an orang, and of Heidelberg (top view) | 100 |
| 50. | Restoration of Heidelberg man | 101 |
| 51. | Map—Europe during the Third Glacial Stage | 105 |
| 52. | Chronological chart of the last third of the Glacial Epoch | 108 |
| 53. | Map—Pre-Chellean and Chellean stations | 109 |
| 54. | Map—Europe during the Third Glacial Stage | 110 |
| 55. | Excavation at Chelles-sur-Marne | 111 |
| 56. | Map—Western Europe during the Third Interglacial Stage | 116 |
| 57. | Three terraces on the Connecticut River | 120 |
| 58. | Four forms of the Chellean coup de poing | 121 |
| 59. | Section—Terraces on the Somme at St. Acheul | 122 |
| 60. | Very primitive palæoliths from Piltdown | 127 |
| 61. | Pre-Chellean coups de poing from St. Acheul | 128 |
| 62. | Pre-Chellean grattoir or planing tool from St. Acheul | 129 |
| 63. | Discovery site of the Piltdown skull | 131 |
| 64. | Section of the Piltdown discovery site | 133 |
| 65. | Primitive worked flint found near the Piltdown skull | 134 |
| 66. | Eoliths found in or near the Piltdown site | 135 |
| 67. | Piltdown skull and skull of South African Bushman | 136 |
| 68. | Restoration of the Piltdown skull, three views | 137 |
| 69. | Section of the Piltdown skull, showing the brain | 140 |
| 70. | Brain outlines of the Piltdown man, of a chimpanzee, and of modern man, compared | 140 |
| 71. | The Piltdown man, side view | 142 |
| 72. | The Piltdown man, front view | 143 |
| 73. | Map—Pre-Chellean and Chellean stations | 149 |
| 74. | Section—Middle and high terraces on the Somme at St. Acheul | 150 |
| 75. | Excavation on the high terrace at St. Acheul | 151 |
| 76. | Small Chellean implements | 153 |
| 77. | Map—Palæolithic stations of Germany | 160 |
| 78. | Entrance to the grotto of Castillo | 163 |
| 79. | Section—archæologic layers of the grotto of Castillo | 164 |
| 80. | Map—Acheulean stations | 167 |
| 81. | Late Acheulean station of La Micoque in Dordogne | 168 |
| 82. | Method of 'flaking' flint | 169 |
| 83. | Method of 'chipping' flint | 170 |
| 84. | The fracture of flint | 171 |
| 85. | Large Acheulean implements | 173 |
| 86. | Map—Valleys of the Dordogne and the Garonne | 175 |
| 87. | The valley of the Vézère | 176 |
| 88. | Acheulean implements, large and small | 178 |
| 89. | A Levallois flake | 179 |
| 90. | The grotto of Krapina | 181 |
| 91. | Section Valley of the Krapinica River and grotto of Krapina | 182 |
| 92. | Section—The grotto of Krapina | 183 |
| 93. | Skull from Krapina, side view | 184 |
| 94. | Map—Europe during the Fourth Glacial Stage | 189 |
| 95. | The woolly rhinoceros and the woolly mammoth | 190 |
| 96. | Typical tundra fauna | 193 |
| 97. | Map—Palæolithic stations of Germany | 195 |
| 98. | The type station of Le Moustier | 197 |
| 99. | Excavations at Le Moustier | 198 |
| 100. | The Mousterian cavern of Wildkirchli | 200 |
| 101. | Entrance to the grotto of Sirgenstein | 201 |
| 102. | The woolly mammoth and his hunters | 208 |
| 103. | The woolly rhinoceros | 210 |
| 104. | Map—Distribution of Pre-Neanderthaloids and Neanderthaloids | 214 |
| 105. | The Gibraltar skull, front view | 215 |
| 106. | Section of the Neanderthal discovery site | 216 |
| 107. | The Neanderthal skull, side view | 217 |
| 108. | The skull known as Spy I, side view | 220 |
| 109. | Discovery site of La Chapelle-aux-Saints | 222 |
| 110. | Entrance to the grotto of La Chapelle-aux-Saints | 223 |
| 111. | The skull from La Chapelle-aux-Saints, three views | 224 |
| 112. | Human teeth of Neanderthaloid type from La Cotte de St. Brelade | 225 |
| 113. | Skulls of a chimpanzee, of La Chapelle-aux-Saints, and of a modern Frenchman, side view | 227 |
| 114. | Outlines of the Gibraltar skull and of a modern Australian skull | 228 |
| 115. | Skull of La Chapelle-aux-Saints compared with one of high modern type, side view | 230 |
| 116. | Skulls of a chimpanzee, of La Chapelle-aux-Saints, and of a modern Frenchman, top view | 231 |
| 117. | Diagram comparing eleven races of fossil and living men | 233 |
| 118. | Section of the skull of La Chapelle-aux-Saints, showing the brain | 235 |
| 119. | Brain outlines of La Chapelle-aux-Saints, of a chimpanzee, and of modern man, compared | 235 |
| 120. | Brains of Lower and Upper Palæolithic races, top and side views | 236 |
| 121. | Skeleton of La Chapelle-aux-Saints | 238 |
| 122. | Thigh-bones of the Trinil, Neanderthal, Crô-Magnon, and modern races | 240 |
| 123. | The Neanderthal man of La Chapelle-aux-Saints, side view | 242 |
| 124. | The Neanderthal man of La Chapelle-aux-Saints, front view | 243 |
| 125. | Map—Mousterian stations | 245 |
| 126. | The Mousterian cave of Hornos de la Peña | 246 |
| 127. | Outlook from the cave of Hornos de la Peña | 247 |
| 128. | Typical Mousterian 'points' from Le Moustier | 250 |
| 129. | Mousterian 'points' and scrapers | 251 |
| 130. | Late Mousterian implements | 255 |
| 131. | Entrance to the Grotte du Prince near Mentone | 262 |
| 132. | Section of the Grotte des Enfants | 265 |
| 133. | The Grimaldi skeletons | 267 |
| 134. | Skull of the Grimaldi youth, front and side views | 268 |
| 135. | Map—Distribution of Upper Palæolithic human fossils | 279 |
| 136. | Chronological chart of the last third of the Glacial Epoch | 280 |
| 137. | 'Tectiforms' from Font-de-Gaume | 283 |
| 138. | Map—Distribution of the reindeer, mammoth, and woolly rhinoceros | 285 |
| 139. | Section of the grotto of Aurignac | 290 |
| 140. | Section of the grotto of Crô-Magnon | 291 |
| 141. | Skull of Crô-Magnon type from the Grotte des Enfants | 292 |
| 142. | Head showing the method of restoration used by J. H. McGregor | 293 |
| 143. | The rock shelter of Laugerie Haute, Dordogne | 296 |
| 144. | Skeleton of La Chapelle-aux-Saints and skeleton of Crô-Magnon type from the Grotte des Enfants, compared | 297 |
| 145. | Sections of normal and platycnæmic tibias | 298 |
| 146. | The 'Old Man of Crô-Magnon,' side view | 300 |
| 147. | The 'Old Man of Crô-Magnon,' front view | 301 |
| 148. | Brain outlines of Combe-Capelle, of a chimpanzee, and of modern man, compared | 303 |
| 149. | Evolution of the burin, early Aurignacian to late Solutrean | 307 |
| 150. | Typical Aurignacian grattoirs, or scrapers | 309 |
| 151. | Evolution of the Aurignacian 'point' | 311 |
| 152. | Prototypes of the Solutrean 'laurel-leaf point' | 312 |
| 153. | Map—Aurignacian stations | 314 |
| 154. | Outlook from the cavern of Pindal | 315 |
| 155. | Mammoth painted in the cavern of Pindal | 316 |
| 156. | Primitive paintings of animals from Font-de-Gaume | 318 |
| 157. | Woolly rhinoceros painted in the cavern of Font-de-Gaume | 319 |
| 158. | Carved female figurine from the Grottes de Grimaldi | 321 |
| 159. | Female figurine in limestone from Willendorf | 322 |
| 160. | Female figurine in soapstone from the Grottes de Grimaldi | 323 |
| 161. | Superposed engravings of rhinoceros and mammoth from Le Trilobite | 324 |
| 162. | Silhouettes of hands from Gargas | 325 |
| 163. | The rock shelter of Laussel on the Beune | 326 |
| 164. | Section of the industrial layers at Laussel | 327 |
| 165. | Bas-relief of a woman from Laussel | 328 |
| 166. | Bas-relief of a man from Laussel | 329 |
| 167. | Map—Solutrean stations | 331 |
| 168. | The skull known as Brünn I, discovered at Brünn, Moravia | 335 |
| 169. | Solutrean 'laurel-leaf points' | 339 |
| 170. | The type station of Solutré | 342 |
| 171. | Excavations at Solutré | 343 |
| 172. | Typical Solutrean implements | 346 |
| 173. | Mammoth sculptured on ivory, from Předmost, Moravia | 349 |
| 174. | Engraved and painted bison from Niaux | 353 |
| 175. | Decorated sagaies or javelin points of bone | 354 |
| 176. | Horse's head engraved on a fragment of bone, from Brassempouy | 355 |
| 177. | Painting of a wolf, from Font-de-Gaume | 356 |
| 178. | Crude sculpture of the ibex, from Mas d'Azil | 357 |
| 179. | Decorated bâtons de commandement | 359 |
| 180. | Chronological chart of the last third of the Glacial epoch | 362 |
| 181. | Engraved and painted reindeer from Font-de-Gaume | 365 |
| 182. | Four types of horse frequent in Upper Palæolithic times | 367 |
| 183. | Horse of Celtic type, painted on the ceiling of Altamira | 368 |
| 184. | Four chamois heads engraved on reindeer horn, from Gourdan | 369 |
| 185. | Typical alpine fauna | 371 |
| 186. | Typical steppe fauna | 374 |
| 187. | Ptarmigan or grouse carved in bone, from Mas d'Azil | 375 |
| 188. | The rock shelter of Laugerie Basse, Dordogne | 377 |
| 189. | Human skull-tops cut into bowls, from Placard | 379 |
| 190. | Male and female skulls of Crô-Magnon type, from Obercassel | 381 |
| 191. | The type station of La Madeleine | 383 |
| 192. | Magdalenian flint implements | 386 |
| 193. | Magdalenian bone harpoons | 387 |
| 194. | Magdalenian flint blades with denticulated edge | 390 |
| 195. | Bone needles from Lacave | 391 |
| 196. | Map—Palæolithic art stations of Dordogne, the Pyrenees, and the Cantabrian Mountains | 394 |
| 197. | Primitive engravings of the mammoth from Combarelles | 397 |
| 198. | Preliminary engraving of painted mammoth from Font-de-Gaume | 397 |
| 199. | Charging mammoth engraved on ivory, from La Madeleine | 398 |
| 200. | Human grotesques from Marsoulas, Altamira, and Combarelles | 399 |
| 201. | Entrance to the cavern of Combarelles, Dordogne | 400 |
| 202. | Engraved cave-bear, from Combarelles | 401 |
| 203. | Magdalenian stone lamp, from La Mouthe | 401 |
| 204. | Entrance to the cavern of La Pasiega | 402 |
| 205. | Engraved bison from Marsoulas | 403 |
| 206. | Herd of horses engraved on a slab of stone, from Chaffaud | 404 |
| 207. | Herd of reindeer engraved on an eagle radius, from La Mairie | 405 |
| 208. | Reindeer and salmon engraved on an antler, from Lorthet | 406 |
| 209. | Engraved lioness and horses, from Font-de-Gaume | 407 |
| 210. | Painted horse of Celtic type, from Castillo | 408 |
| 211. | Galloping horse of steppe type, from Font-de-Gaume | 408 |
| 212. | Entrance to the cavern of Niaux | 409 |
| 213. | Engraved horse with heavy winter coat, from Niaux | 410 |
| 214. | Professor Emile Cartailhac at the entrance of Le Portel | 411 |
| 215. | Engraved horse and reindeer, from La Mairie | 412 |
| 216. | Engraved reindeer, cave-bear, and two horses, from La Mairie | 413 |
| 217. | Engraved wild cattle, from La Mairie | 413 |
| 218. | Preliminary etched outline of bison from Font-de-Gaume | 414 |
| 219. | Entrance to the cavern of Font-de-Gaume | 415 |
| 220. | Map of the cavern of Font-de-Gaume | 416 |
| 221. | Narrow passage known as the 'Rubicon,' Font-de-Gaume | 417 |
| 222. | Plan showing reindeer and procession of bison, Font-de-Gaume | 419 |
| 223. | Plan showing preliminary engraving and painting of the procession of mammoths, superposed on drawings of bison, reindeer, and horses | 420 |
| 224. | Example of superposition of paintings, from Font-de-Gaume | 421 |
| 225. | Entrance to the cavern of Altamira | 422 |
| 226. | Plan of paintings on the ceiling of Altamira | 423 |
| 227. | The ceiling of Altamira | 424 |
| 228. | Painting of female bison lying down, from Altamira | 425 |
| 229. | Royal stag engraved on the ceiling of Altamira | 426 |
| 230. | Statuette of a mammoth carved in reindeer horn, from Bruniquel | 427 |
| 231. | Entrance to the cavern of Tuc d'Audoubert | 428 |
| 232. | Engraved head of a reindeer from Tuc d'Audoubert | 429 |
| 233. | Two bison, male and female, modelled in clay, from Tuc d'Audoubert | 430 |
| 234. | Horse carved in high relief, from Cap Blanc | 431 |
| 235. | Horse head carved on a reindeer antler, from Mas d'Azil | 432 |
| 236. | Statuette of horse carved in ivory, from Les Espelugues | 432 |
| 237. | Woman's head carved in ivory, from Brassempouy | 433 |
| 238. | Map—Magdalenian stations | 435 |
| 239. | Necklace of marine shells, from Crô-Magnon | 437 |
| 240. | Map—Palæolithic stations of Germany | 439 |
| 241. | Reindeer engraved around a piece of reindeer antler, from Kesslerloch | 441 |
| 242. | Entrance to the grotto of Kesslerloch | 444 |
| 243. | The rock shelter of Schweizersbild | 445 |
| 244. | The open loess station of Aggsbach | 448 |
| 245. | Saiga antelope carved on a bone dart-thrower, from Mas d'Azil | 449 |
| 246. | Western entrance to the cavern of Mas d'Azil | 460 |
| 247. | Azilian harpoons of stag horn | 462 |
| 248. | Azilian galets coloriés, or painted pebbles | 464 |
| 249. | Tardenoisian flints | 467 |
| 250. | Map—Azilian-Tardenoisian stations | 471 |
| 251. | Azilian stone implements | 473 |
| 252. | Double-rowed Azilian harpoons of stag horn, from Oban | 474 |
| 253. | Section—Archæologic layers in the grotto of Ofnet | 476 |
| 254. | Burial nest of six skulls, from the grotto of Ofnet | 477 |
| 255. | Brachycephalic and dolichocephalic skulls from Ofnet | 478 |
| 256. | Broad-headed skull of Grenelle | 482 |
| 257. | Entrance to the grotto of Furfooz on the Lesse | 482 |
| 258. | Section of the grotto of Furfooz | 483 |
| 259. | One of the type skulls of the Furfooz race | 483 |
| 260. | Restoration of the man of Grenelle | 484 |
| 261. | Implements and decorations from Maglemose | 487 |
| 262. | Ancestry of the Pre-Neolithic races | 491 |
| 263. | Stages in the manufacture of the Neolithic stone ax | 493 |
| 264. | Stone hatchet from Campigny | 494 |
| 265. | Stone pick from Campigny | 494 |
| 266. | Restoration of the Neolithic man of Spiennes | 495 |
| 267. | Stag hunt, painting from the rock shelter of Alpera | 497 |
| 268. | Map—Distribution of the types of recent man in western Europe | 499 |