[1]Erland Nordenskiöld,
Modifications in Indian Customs
Through Inventions and Loans (Comparative Ethnographical
Studies, no. 8, 1930), 23-24.
[2]Nordenskiöld, “Origin of the Indian Civilizations in South
America,” in
The American Aborigines (1933), 278.
[4]Robert H. Lowie,
The History of Ethnological Theory
(1937), 165.
[5]Herbert J. Spinden, “The Origin and Distribution of Agriculture
in America,” in
Source Book in Anthropology (1931),
228.
[6]Carl Sauer, “American Agricultural Origins,” in
Essays in
Anthropology, ed. R. H. Lowie (1936), 281.
[7]N. I. Vavilov, “Studies on the Origin of Cultivated Plants,”
Bulletin of Applied Botany, vol 16, no. 2, pp. 218-219
(1926). S. M. Bukasov and others, “The Cultivated Plants
of Mexico, Guatemala, and Colombia,” 47th Supplement
to the
Bulletin of Applied Botany, 1930. Other papers listed
in Henry J. Bruman, “The Russian Investigations on Plant
Genetics in Latin America and Their Bearing on Culture
History,”
Handbook of Latin American Studies (1937), 287.
[8]Bruman,
op. cit., 451.
[10]Bruman,
op. cit., 456.
[11]Richard S. MacNeish, “Agricultural Origins in Middle
America and Their Diffusion into North America,”
Katunob,
vol. 1, no. 2 (1960), 29.
[12]Harold S. Gladwin,
Excavations at Snaketown (Medallion
Papers, Gila Pueblo, no. 26, 1937), 2:79.
[13]Bruman,
op. cit., 456-457.
[14]O. F. Cook, “Staircase Farms of the Ancients,”
National
Geographic Magazine, 29:513 (1916).
[15]P. C. Mangelsdorf and R. G. Reeves,
The Origin of Indian
Corn and Its Relatives (Bulletin No. 574, Texas Agricultural
Experiment Station, 1939), 7.
[18]Sauer,
op. cit., 292.
[19]G. N. Collins, “The Phylogeny of Maize,”
Bulletin, Torrey
Botanical Club, 57:203 (1930).
[20]Bruman,
op. cit., 457.
[21]Sylvanus G. Morley,
The Ancient Maya (1946), 386.
[22]MacNeish,
op. cit., 27.
[23]Paul C. Mangelsdorf, “Ancestor of Corn,”
Science, 128:1314
(1958).
[24]Paul C. Mangelsdorf and C. Earle Smith, Jr., “A Discovery
of Primitive Maize in New Mexico,”
Journal of Heredity,
40:39-43 (1949), and “New Archaeological Evidence on
Evolution in Maize,”
Harvard University Botanical Museum
Leaflets, vol. 13, no. 8, 213-247 (Mar., 1949).
[25]Willard F. Libby,
Radiocarbon Dating (1955), 133.
[26]Junius Bird, “South American Radiocarbon Dates,” in
Radiocarbon
Dating (Memoirs, Society for American Archaeology,
vol. 17, no. 1, pt. 2, 1951), 48.
[27]Wm. Duncan Strong, ‘Finding the Tomb of a Warrior-God,”
National Geographic Magazine, 91:464, 459 (1947). Junius
B. Bird, “Preceramic Cultures in Chicama and Virú,” in
A
Reappraisal of Peruvian Archaeology (Memoirs, Society for
American Archaeology, vol. 13, no. 4, pt. 2, 1948), 28.
Strong, “Cultural Epochs Refuse Stratigraphy in Peruvian
Archaeology,” in
A Reappraisal of Peruvian Archaeology, 99.
[28]Carl Sauer, personal communication, 1946.
[29]Oakes Ames,
Economic Annuals and Human Cultures (Botanical
Museum of Harvard University, 1939), 92-93.
[30]Edgar Anderson, “What Is Zea Mays?”
Chronica Botanica,
9:89-90 (1945).
[31]C. R. Stonor and Edgar Anderson, “Maize Among the Hill
Peoples of Assam,”
Annals of the Missouri Botanical Garden,
36:355-404 (1949).
[32]Mangelsdorf, “Ancestor of Corn,”
Science, 128:1313.
Chapter 12
[1]Clark Wissler, “The Origin of the American Indian,”
Natural
History, 53:313 (1944).
[2]Frank H. H. Roberts, Jr., “The New-World Paleo-Indian,”
Smithsonian Institution Annual Report for 1944, 406.
[3]Earnest A. Hooton,
Up from the Ape, 1931, 568.
[4]Junius Bird, personal communications, 1945-1947.
[5]A. P. Okladnikov, “Archaeological Data on the Ancient History
of the Lake Baikal Region,”
Review of Ancient History,
vol. 1, pt. 2, fig. 5 (Moscow, 1938). Henry B. Collins,
Jr., “Eskimo Archaeology and Its Bearing on the Problem
of Man’s Antiquity in America,”
Proceedings, American
Philosophical Society, 86:229-230 (1943), fig. 5.
[6]George Gaylord Simpson, “Mammals and Land Bridges,”
Journal, Washington Academy of Sciences, 40:153 (1940).
[7]Bruce Howe and Hallam L. Movius, Jr.,
A Stone Age Cave
Site in Tangier (Papers, Peabody Museum, vol 28, no. 1,
1947). Gertrude Caton-Thompson, “The Levalloisian Industries
in Egypt,”
Proceedings, Prehistoric Society, 1946,
new ser., 12:57-120.
[8]Carleton S. Coon,
The Races of Europe (1939), 46.
[9]W. J. Sollas,
Ancient Hunters and Their Modern Representatives
(2nd ed., 1915), 485-487, 510-513, 520.
[10]Aleš Hrdlička, “The Coming of Man from Asia in the Light
of Recent Discoveries,”
Proceedings, American Philosophical
Society, 71:401 (1932).
[11]Nels C. Nelson, “The Antiquity of Man in America in the
Light of Archaeology,” in
The American Aborigines, ed.
Diamond Jenness (1933), 116.
[12]M. R. Harrington,
Cuba Before Columbus, pt. 1 (Indian
Notes and Monographs, Museum of the American Indian,
1921), 1:205-206, and
Gypsum Cave, Nevada (Southwest
Museum Papers, no. 8, 1933), 189-190.
[13]Thomas Jefferson,
Notes on the State of Virginia, 1801, 148.
[14]Hallam L. Movius, Jr.,
Early Man and Pleistocene Stratigraphy
in Southern and Eastern Asia (Papers, Peabody Museum,
vol. 19, no. 3, 1944), 25-27.
[15]Herbert J. Spinden,
World Chronology and the Peopling of
America (mimeographed Presidential Address read before
the American Anthropological Society, Washington, Dec.
27, 1936), 5.
[16]Herbert J. Spinden, personal communication, 1946.
[17]Spinden, “First Peopling of America As a Chronological
Problem,” in
Early Man (1937), 106, and
World Chronology,
etc., 5.
[18]Spinden,
World Chronology, etc., 4.
[19]A. S. Loukashkin, “Some Observations on the Remains of a
Pleistocene Fauna and of the Paleolithic Age in Northern
Manchuria,” in
Early Man (1937), 327-340.
[20]Spinden, “Time Scale for the New World.”
Proceedings,
8th American Scientific Congress, 2:39 (1942), and
World
Chronology, etc., 2, 19.
[21]Ernst Antevs, personal communication, 1946.
[22]Kirk Bryan, “Geologic Antiquity of Man in America.”
Science,
new ser., 93:505-514 (1941).
[23]Carl Sauer, “Early Relations of Man to Plants,”
Geographical
Review, 37:10 (1947).
[24]Erwin H. Barbour and C. Bertrand Schultz, “Paleontologic
and Geologic Consideration of Early Man in Nebraska,”
Bulletin, Nebraska State Museum, 1:431 (1936).
[25]George F. Carter, The Idea of the Recency of Man in America
(unpublished MS.).
[26]Albrecht Penck, “Wann kamen die Indianer nach Nordamerika?”
Proceedings, 23rd International Congress of Americanists
(1930), 23-30.
[27]H. V. Walter, A. Cathoud, and Anibal Mattos, “The Confins
Man: A Contribution to the Study of Early Man in South
America,” in
Early Man (1937), 345.
[28]Kirk Bryan, “Correlation of the Deposits of Sandia Cave,
New Mexico, with the Glacial Chronology,” Appendix to
Hibben, “Evidences of Early Occupation in Sandia Cave”
(
Smithsonian Miscellaneous Collections, no. 23, 1941, vol.
99), 69.
[29]Ernst Antevs, “Correlation of Wisconsin Glacial Maxima,”
American Journal of Science, 243A:29 (1945) and “Dating
Records of Early Man in the Southwest,”
American Naturalist,
70:336 (1936). Chart in Gladwin,
Excavations at Snaketown,
2:73. “Climatic History and the Antiquity of Man in
California,”
Reports of the University of California Archaeological
Survey, 16:23-29 (1952).
[30]Antevs, “Climate and Early Man in North America,” in
Early Man, 128, and “Dating Records, etc.,” 333.
[31]Carl Sauer, “Geographic Sketch of Early Man in America,”
Geographical Review, 34:538 (1944).
[32]M. C. Burkitt,
The Old Stone Age, 86-87 (1933).
REFERENCES AS TO ILLUSTRATIONS
(In the main, the earliest instances of publication)
PAGE 13. Edward Brerewood, Enquiries Touching the Diversity
of Languages, and Religions, Through the Chief Parts of
the World (1622—1st ed., 1614).
PAGE 18. W. A. Johnston, “Quaternary Geology of North
America in Relation to the Migration of Man,” in The American
Aborigines, ed. D. Jenness (1933).
PAGE 19. Carl Sauer, “Geographic Sketch of Early Man in
America,” Geographical Review, Vol. 34 (1944).
PAGES 26 and 27. Harold S. Gladwin, Excavations at Snaketown:
II, Comparisons and Theories (1937), and Ernst
Antevs, personal communication.
PAGE 44. Arthur Holmes, Principles of Physical Geology
(1945). Earnest A. Hooton, Up from the Ape (1931).
PAGE 48. Richard F. Flint, Glacial Geology and the Pleistocene
Epoch (1947). Ernst Antevs, The Last Glaciation
(American Geographical Society Research Series, no. 17,
1928). Richard F. Flint and H. G. Dorsey, “Glaciation of
Siberia,” Bulletin, Geological Society of America, Vol. 56
(1945). R. A. Daly, The Changing World of the Ice Age
(1934).
PAGE 55. Arthur Keith, New Discoveries Relating to the Antiquity
of Man (1931). Henry Fairfield Osborn, Men of the
Old Stone Age (1915). Albrecht Penck and Eduard Brückner,
Die Alpen im Eiszeitalter (1901-1909). Frederick E.
Zeuner, The Pleistocene Period: Its Climate, Chronology and
Faunal Successions (1945). H. N. Fisk, Geological Investigation
of the Alluvial Valley of the Lower Mississippi River
(1944). Henry Fairfield Osborn, Man Rises to Parnassus
(1927).
PAGE 58. George C. Simpson, “Ice Ages,” Nature, Vol. 141
(1938). Carl Sauer, “Geographic Sketch of Early Man in
America,” Geographical Review, Vol. 34 (1944).
PAGE 62. W. J. Sollas, Ancient Hunters and Their Modern
Representatives (1911).
PAGE 66. Harold Peake and Herbert John Fleure, Apes and
Men (1927). J. Reid Moir, The Antiquity of Man in East
Anglia (1927). E. Ray Lankester, “Rostro-Carinate Flint Implements,”
Proceedings, Royal Society, Vol. 41 (1912).
PAGE 71. Henry Fairfield Osborn, Men of the Old Stone Age
(1915). L. S. B. Leakey, Adam’s Ancestors (3rd ed., 1935).
Miles C. Burkitt, The Old Stone Age: A Study of Palaeolithic
Times (1933).
PAGE 74. Charles Dawson and A. Smith Woodward, “On a
Bone Implement from Piltdown (Sussex),” Quarterly Journal,
Geological Society of London, Vol. 71 (1917). O. G. S.
Crawford, Man and His Past (1921).
PAGE 82. Henry Fairfield Obsorn, Men of the Old Stone Age
(1915). Hans Weinert, “Zusammenfassung des Pithecanthropus
Problems,” Zeitschriften für Anatomie und Entwicklungsgeschichte,
Vol. 87 (1928).
PAGE 83. Gustav H. R. von Koenigswald, “Search for Early
Man,” Natural History, Vol. 56 (1947).
PAGE 89. Franz Weidenreich, Apes, Giants, and Men (1946).
J. H. McGregor, “Restoring Neanderthal Man,” Natural History,
Vol. 26 (1926). R. Verneau, “Les Grottes de Grimaldi,”
Anthropologie, Vol. 2 (1906). Raymond W. Murray, Man’s
Unknown Ancestors (1943).
PAGE 90. Gabriel de Mortillet, Musée Préhistorique (1881).
PAGE 91. W. H. Holmes, Handbook of Aboriginal American
Antiquities (1919).
PAGE 92. Ibid.
PAGE 93. Ibid.
PAGE 98. Henry Fairfield Osborn, Men of the Old Stone Age
(1915).
PAGE 100. John Evans, The Ancient Stone Implements,
Weapons, and Ornaments of Great Britain (1872).
PAGE 101. Miles C. Burkitt, The Old Stone Age: A Study of
Palaeolithic Times (1933). George Grant MacCurdy, Human
Origins (1924).
PAGE 102. Harold Peake and Herbert John Fleure, Hunters
and Artists (1927).
PAGE 103. George Grant MacCurdy, Human Origins, Vol. I
(1924). L. S. B. Leakey, Adam’s Ancestors (3rd ed., 1935).
PAGE 105. Miles C. Burkitt, The Old Stone Age: A Study of
Palaeolithic Times (1933). George Grant MacCurdy, Human
Origins, Vol. I (1924). Edith Plant, Man’s Unwritten Past
(1942).
PAGE 106. George Grant MacCurdy, Human Origins, Vol. I
(1924).
PAGE 107. Thomas Wilson, “Prehistoric Art,” Report, U.S. National
Museum for 1896 (1898).
PAGE 108. E. Lartet and H. Christy, Reliquiae Aquitanicae
(1875).
PAGE 108. Michele Mercati, Metallotheca, Opus Posthumum
(1717).
PAGE 109. Mark R. Harrington, Gypsum Cave, Nevada
(Southwest Museum Papers, no. 8, 1933).
PAGE 110. Emile Cartailhac and Henri Breuil, “La Caverne
d’Altamira à Santillane près Santander (Espagne),” Peintures
et gravures murales des cavernes paléolithiques (1906). L.
Capitan, H. Breuil, and D. Peyroni, “La Caverne de Font-de-Gaume
aux Eyzies (Dordogne),” Peintures et gravures
murales des cavernes paléolithiques (1910).
PAGE 112. Hugo Obermaier and Paul Wernert, Las Pinturas
rupestres del barranco de Valltorta (1919).
PAGE 113. Ibid.
PAGE 114. L. Capitan, H. Breuil, and D. Peyroni, “La Caverne
de Font-de-Gaume aux Eyzies (Dordogne),” Peintures
et gravures murales des cavernes paléolithiques (1910).
PAGES 116 and 117. Harold Peake and Herbert John Fleure,
Hunters and Artists (1927). Arthur Keith, New Discoveries
Relating to the Antiquity of Man (1931). Henry Fairfield
Osborn, Men of the Old Stone Age (1915). Robert Braidwood,
personal communication, 1946. Frederick E. Zeuner,
Dating the Past (1946).
PAGE 144. Charles C. Abbott, “The Stone Age in New Jersey,”
American Naturalist, Vol. 16 (1872).
PAGE 145. Israel C. Russell, The Geological History of Lake
Lahontan (U.S. Geological Survey, Monograph no. 11,
1885).
PAGE 147. J. Graham D. Clarke, “New World Origins,” Antiquity,
Vol. 14 (1940).
PAGE 152. W. J. Sollas, Ancient Hunters and Their Modern
Representatives (1911).
PAGE 155. H. M. Wormington, Ancient Man in North America
(Denver Museum of Natural History, Popular Series no.
4, 2nd rev. ed., 1944). Edgar B. Howard, “Evidence of Early
Man in North America,” Museum Journal, Vol. 24 (1935).
Alex Krieger, “Artifacts from the Plainview Bison Bed,”
Bulletin, Geological Society of America, Vol. 58 (1947).
PAGE 157. Frank C. Hibben, “Evidence of Early Man in
Alaska,” American Antiquity, Vol. 8 (1943). Frank H. H.
Roberts, Jr., “Developments in the Problem of the North
American Paleo-Indian,” Smithsonian Miscellaneous Collections,
Vol. 100 (1940).
PAGE 158. Edgar B. Howard, “Evidence of Early Man in
North America,” Museum Journal, Vol. 24 (1935). W. J. Sollas,
Ancient Hunters and Their Modern Representatives
(1911). Edith Plant, Man’s Unwritten Past (1942). Jacques
J. M. de Morgan, Prehistoric Man (1925).
PAGE 159. Frank C. Hibben, op. cit.; Frank J. J. Roberts, Jr.,
op. cit.
PAGE 161. H. M. Wormington, Ancient Man in North America
(2nd rev. ed., 1944). E. W. C. and H. H. Campbell,
and others, The Archaeology of Pleistocene Lake Mohave
(Southwest Museum Papers, no. 11, 1937).
PAGE 162. H. M. Wormington, Ancient Man in North America
(2nd rev. ed., 1944).
PAGE 165. Frank C. Hibben, “Evidences of Early Occupation
in Sandia Cave, New Mexico,” Smithsonian Miscellaneous
Collections, Vol. 99 (1941). Bruce Howe and Hallam L.
Movius, Jr., A Stone Age Site in Tangier, Vol. 28 (Papers of
the Peabody Museum, 1947). Edith Plant, Man’s Unwritten
Past (1942).
PAGE 168. Paul S. Martin, George I. Quimby, and Donald
Collier, Indians Before Columbus (1947).
PAGE 171. Mariano Barceno, “Descripción de un hueso
labrado, de llama fosil,” Anales, Museo Nacional de México,
Vol. 2 (1882).
PAGE 179. G. F. Becker, “Antiquities from Under Tuolumne
Table Mountain in California,” Bulletin, Geological Society
of America, Vol. 2 (1891).
PAGE 190. Edwin H. Colbert, “The Association of Man with
Extinct Mammals in the Western Hemisphere,” Proceedings
of the Eighth American Scientific Congress, Vol. 2 (1942).
PAGE 208. Earnest A. Hooton, Up from the Ape (1931).
PAGE 212. Griffith Taylor, “The Nordic and the Alpine Races
and Their Kin,” American Journal of Sociology, Vol. 37
(1931).
PAGE 214. L. S. B. Leakey, Adam’s Ancestors (1935). Rudolf
Martin, Lehrbuch der Anthropologie, etc. (1928). E. P.
Stibbe, An Introduction to Physical Anthropology (1938).
Earnest A. Hooton, Up from the Ape (1931).
PAGE 216. E. P. Stibbe, An Introduction to Physical Anthropology
(1938). Earnest A. Hooton, Up from the Ape (1947).
Herman F. C. ten Kate, “Matériaux pour servir à l’anthropologie
de la presqu’île Californienne,” Vol. 7, Bulletin, Société
d’ Anthropologie de Paris (1884). George and Edna
Woodbury, Prehistoric Skeletal Remains from the Texas
Coast (Medallion Papers, Gila Pueblo, no. 28, 1935). Louis
R. Sullivan and Milo Hellman, “The Punin Calvarium,”
Anthropological Papers, Amer. Museum of Natural History,
Vol. 23 (1925). Aleš Hrdlička, “Early Man in America,”
American Journal of Science, Ser. 4, Vol. 34, (1912). Earnest
A. Hooton, “Notes on Five Texas Crania,” Bulletin,
Texas Archaeological and Paleontological Soc., Vol. 5 (1933).
PAGE 228. Harold S. Gladwin, Excavations at Snaketown: II,
Comparisons and Theories (Medallion Papers, Gila Pueblo,
no. 26, 1937).
PAGE 235. Erich M. von Hornbostel, Die Musik auf den nordwestlichen
Salomon-Inseln aus dem Phonogramm-Archiv des
Psychologischen Instituts der Universität Berlin (1912). Erland
Nordenskiöld, The Ethnography of South America as
Seen from Mojos in Bolivia (Comparative Ethnological
Studies, no. 3, 1924).
PAGE 237. Harold S. Gladwin, Excavations at Snaketown: II,
Comparisons and Theories (Medallion Papers, Gila Pueblo,
no. 26, 1937). Frances Elmore, “The Casa Grande National
Monument,” Arizona’s National Monuments (1945). James
Wickersham, “An Aboriginal War Club,” American Antiquarian,
Vol. 3 (1895). J. Imbelloni, “On the Diffusion in
America of Patu Onewa, Okewa, Patu Paraoa, Miti, and
Other Relatives of the Mere Family,” Journal, Polynesian
Society, Vol. 39 (1930).
PAGE 250. George C. Vaillant, “A Bearded Mystery,” Natural
History, Vol. 31 (1931). Matthew W. Stirling, “Great
Stone Faces of the Mexican Jungle,” National Geographic
Magazine, Vol. 78 (1940). Miguel Covarrubias, Mexico
South (1946).
PAGE 273. Paul C. Mangelsdorf and C. Earle Smith, Jr., “New
Archaeological Evidence on Evolution in Maize,” Harvard
University Botanical Museum Leaflets, Vol. 13, no. 8 (Mar.
4, 1949).
PAGE 282. A. P. Okladnikov, “Archaeological Data on the
Ancient History of the Baikal Region,” Review of Ancient
History, Vol. 86 (Moscow, 1938). Henry B. Collins, Jr.,
“Eskimo Archaeology and Its Bearing on the Problem of
Man’s Antiquity in America,” Proceedings, American Philosophical
Society, Vol. 86 (1943). Edgar B. Howard, “Evidence
of Early Man in North America,” Museum Journal,
Vol. 24 (1935).
PAGE 285. Hallam L. Movius, Jr., Early Man and Pleistocene
Stratigraphy in Southern and Eastern Asia, Vol. 19, no. 3
Papers, Peabody Museum (1944).
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the Pleistocene,” Transactions, Royal Society of Edinburgh,
Vol. 60 (1942).
INDEX
A B C D E F G H I J K L M N O P Q R S T U V W X Y Z
- A
- Abbevillian, as substitution for Chellean, 64
- Abbott, C. C., 124;
- discoveries of, 145
- Abilene points. See Milnes Milnesand points
- Acosta, Father José de, believes Old and New Worlds joined, 12, 13
- Adhémar, J., on cause of glaciation, 54
- Agassiz, Louis, and glacial hypothesis, 46, 47, 121
- Agriculture, animals in, 8;
- development of, 7, 30, 39, 40, 167, 182;
- difference between Mediterranean and New World, 264;
- in fertile crescent, 40;
- and increase of roundheadness, 211;
- of Indian culture, 246, 263-65, 267-68, 272;
- and neolithic man, 38, 283;
- origins in New World of, 254, 258, 265;
- women in, 38, 39, 265
- Altamira, paintings discovered at cave of, 110-11
- Ameghino, Fiorino, 125-26;
- discoveries of, 123-24
- American Association for the Advancement of Science, 258
- Anderson, Edgar, on Burmese origin of corn, 274-75
- Animal fossils, 189-205;
- abundance of, 128;
- Alaskan, 203;
- in association with human bones, 120-21, 123, 126, 130-33, 139, 204, 215, 294
- Animals, domesticated, 8, 34
- Antevs, Ernst, 150;
- and Cochise culture, 167;
- dates corn, 273;
- and glaciation, 49, 205;
- on length of residence of man in New World, 31;
- on Minnesota man, 132;
- on pluvials, 293, 294
- Archeology, beginnings of, 61
- Arrow, as precursor of spear point, 105
- Ashe, Thomas, on extinct American mammals, 193
- Aterians, use of arrowhead by, 107
- Atlantis, 16
- Aurignacian culture, 99-101;
- recognized in ancestry of American Indian, 218, 285-86
- Australopithecines, 85-87
- B
- Badarians, 39
- Barbour, Erwin H., on existence of glacial man, 290
- Basket Makers, 219, 221-22, 247
- Basketry, beginnings of, 38;
- in first Christian centuries, 219
- Bastian, Adolf, 175;
- theory of psychic unity by, 238
- Bering Strait, 2, 3. See also Migration routes
- crossing of, 2, 16, 17, 24, 60, 219-20, 224, 278;
- Palisades culture north of, 188
- Bernhardi, A., and glacial hypothesis, 46
- Bird, Junius, 274;
- discoveries of, 132, 175
- Birdsell, Joseph, on origin of early man in New World, 230-31
- Bison bison, evolution of, 198-200
- Boas, Franz, on diversity of languages, 6
- Boucher (de Crèvecoeur) de Perthes, Jacques, 129-30;
- discovers reality of glacial man, 63, 64
- Bow and arrow, hypothesis on invention of, 108-9, 242
- Braidwood, Robert G., on stay of Solutreans in Europe, 102;
- time scale of early man by, 65
- Breasted, James H., Sr., on advent of agriculture, 39
- Bronze Age, limits of, 33, 34
- Broom, Robert, and Dart discover southern apes, 85
- Brückner, Eduard, and Alpine glaciation, 47;
- on duration of glaciation, 55;
- on temperatures during glaciation, 53
- Bruman, Henry J., 266;
- on agriculture in New World, 272-73
- Bryan, Kirk, 137, 150;
- flints recorded by, 175;
- on length of residence of man in New World, 31, 289-90;
- on Minnesota man, 132;
- on movement of Durst Silts, 163;
- on pluvials, 293
- Burins, 107
- Burkitt, M. C., on pluvials, 294
- C
- Calaveras skull, dispute with churchmen over, 122
- Campbell, Mr. and Mrs. W. H., discoveries of, 160, 169, 175
- Carbon 14. See Dating, through radiocarbon
- Carter, George F., on existence of glacial man, 183, 290
- Catholic church, 191;
- explanation of Indians by, 12
- Cephalic index, 210-18
- Childe, Gordon, on beginnings of archeology, 61;
- on invention of writing, 115;
- on neolithic civilization, 37, 38;
- on Stone Age, 114-15;
- on superiority of metal over stone for tools, 34
- Clovis man, name change of, xii;
- points of, found with extinct mammal fossils, 191
- Cochise culture, 167-69
- Colbert, Edwin H., on extinction of mammals, 203
- Confins man, 131, 293
- Conquistadores, 2
- Conyers, discoveries of, 61, 62
- Coon, Carleton S., on origins of early man in New World, 230, 284
- Corn, 267, 268-76;
- no wild ancestor for Indian, 263, 272;
- origins in New World of, 265
- Coup de poing. See Hand axes
- Cressman, L. S., discoveries of, 179
- Croll, James, on causes of glaciation, 54
- Cro-Magnon man, 63, 89, 97, 126;
- as part of Aurignacian culture, 99, 100
- Culture periods, Ameghino’s, 123;
- confusion in determining, 115-18;
- history of classification of, 33;
- indicated by tools, 65-72;
- major divisions of, 33-37;
- Mortillet’s, 64, 65, 68
- Cummings, Byron, discovers milling stones, 167
- Cuvier, cataclysmal explanation of great extinction by, 201
- D
- Dart, Raymond, 86;
- and Broom discover southern apes, 85
- Dasypodidae. See Extinct armadillo
- Dating, of early man by death of mammals, 189-205, 294;
- through pluvial periods, 52, 63;
- through pottery, 247;
- through radiocarbon, xi, 9, 86, 94-97, 100, 102, 138, 140, 179, 188, 204, 278;
- from sloth dung, 160;
- of Turin skeletons, 140
- Dawn stones. See Eoliths
- Diaz (del Castillo), Bernal, on principle of wheel in New World, 30;
- on Mexican mammoth bone, 136
- Dixon, Roland B., criticizes Rivet’s languages hypothesis, 255;
- on cultural diffusion, 243-44;
- on origins of early man in New World, 220-22;
- on transpacific migration, 30, 218
- Douglas, A. E., originates tree-ring count, 49
- Dubois, Eugène, 85;
- discovers Java man, 81, 82
- E
- Eden culture, name change of, xii;
- points of, 154, 158, 203;
- pressure flaking in, 104, 181
- Eiseley, Loren C., on Athabasca bison, 200;
- on extinction of American mammals, 192-93, 195, 202-3;
- questions evidence of historic mastodon, 197
- Ekholm, Gordon, on Asia-America diffusion, 258
- Engravings, on bone, 172-73
- Eoliths, development of tools from, 67, 163;
- origin of, 67, 68
- Eskimo, 6, 220, 279;
- Caspian strain in, 221
- Eustatism, 59
- Evans, Glen L., discovers Plainview point, 156
- Ewing, Maurice, on cause of glaciation, 56, 57
- Extinct armadillo, 190
- F
- Facial index, 211-12
- Fertile crescent, 40
- Figgins, J. D., discovers Folsom point, 144-46
- Fire lenses, 183
- Flint knapping, 282-83;
- finest, 154;
- steps in, 282-83
- Flint, Richard F., on last glaciation, 19, 49, 60
- Fluorine test, for fossils, 76
- Folsom man, dating of, 28, 151-52, 181, 191, 199-201;
- Generalized, 156;
- pressure flaking in culture of, 104;
- spear points of, 144-51, 153-55, 191, 198
- Fontechevade man, discovery of, 80
- Font Robert point, 100, 105;
- appearance of, 107
- Frere, John, discoveries of, 62
- G
- García, Fray Gregorio, on origins of Indians, 14, 15
- Geikie, James, and glacial hypothesis, 47
- Giddings, J. L., Palisades culture of, 188
- Gigantopithecus, 83, 84
- Glacial Period. See Great Ice Age
- Glaciation. See Ice ages
- Gladwin, Harold S., 49, 162;
- on advent of Pygmies in New World, 225-26;
- on cultural diffusion, 242-43, 246-49;
- on independent invention of agriculture, 267;
- on invasion of America by Alexander the Great, 249-55;
- on various early migrations to New World, 227, 229-30, 247
- Great Ice Age, definition of, 44, 45, 48, 60;
- large mammals in, 84, 181, 204;
- rainfall during, 294;
- theory of flake vs. core tools in, 70.
- See also Ice ages
- Grimaldi man, 102
- Günz glaciation, Danubian glaciers before, 47;
- determination of time of, 54
- Gypsum man, 159, 160
- H
- Haddon, A. C., recognizes Australoid in America, 218
- Haeckel, Ernst, 81
- Hand axes, 84, 85, 173;
- as products of core industry, 70, 286;
- development of, 68, 111;
- in the New World, 173-76, 183, 287;
- spread of use of, 72
- Harrington, John, on diversity of Indian speech, 6
- Harrington, M. R., discoveries of, 159;
- on forebears of Eskimo, 223;
- on migration through Ireland, 25
- Haua Fteah, importance of finds at, 96
- Heidelberg man, 80;
- taurodontism in, 77
- Heizer, Robert F., discoveries of, 136, 160;
- on Monument skulls, 135
- Henri-Martin, Mlle., 80
- Hester, Jim, on extinction of mammals, 205
- Hibben, Frank C., and Generalized Folsom points, 156;
- discoveries of, 164;
- on crossing into New World, 20;
- redates Durst Silts, 163
- Holmes, W. H., 31;
- attacks early man, 124, 174;
- on King’s pestle, 178
- Holocene. See Postglacial Period
- Homo sapiens. See Man
- Hooton, Earnest A., 31, 32, 97;
- on length of residence of man in New World, 132-33;
- on origins of early man in New World, 219-20, 222-23;
- quoted, 207, 233;
- recognizes Australoid in America, 218;
- on resemblance of American Indian to Old World peoples, 209, 222-23, 233, 241-42;
- on spurious finds, 125-26
- Housebuilding, earliest evidence in New World of, 171
- Howard, Edgar B., discoveries of, 149-50;
- on customs of Folsom man, 152-53, 280;
- on length of residence of man in New World, 6;
- on preservation of mammals, 198
- Howells, W. W., quoted, 1;
- sees similarity between American and Pacific tribes, 222
- Howorth, Henry H., on extinction of mammals in New World, 201
- Hrdlička, Aleš, attacks on traces of early man by, 124-28, 134;
- on Aurignacian and Magdalenian ancestry in American Indian, 218;
- on Calaveras skull, 123;
- on crossing into New World, 18, 20;
- on Indian culture, 240-41;
- on migration routes, 21
- Huntington, Ellsworth, on migration across Atlantic, 25
- I
- Ice ages, xii, 9, 18, 19;
- Alpine glaciations in, 47, 48;
- changes in sea level in, 50-53;
- classification of, 44, 45;
- extent of Wisconsin glaciation in, 18, 24, 26, 60;
- hypothesis of land bridge in, 17, 18, 289;
- hypothesis on causes of glaciation in, 53-60;
- mammals in Americas in, 190;
- migration in, 288-92;
- and migration routes, 21-25, 60;
- overlapping of centers in, 49;
- Sangamon Interglacial period in, 24;
- wood in, 35
- Imbelloni, José, on advent of Pygmies in New World, 225-26
- Indian race, autochthonous origin of, 233-34;
- as descendants of Welsh, 16;
- as inventor of own culture, 261;
- myth of, 207, 279
- Insects, in man’s diet, 41
- International Congress of Americanists, 257
- J
- Java man. See Pithecanthropus erectus
- Jefferson, Thomas, excavates Virginia mound, 120;
- and fossils of extinct mammals, 191;
- on origin of Eskimo, 286
- Jenks, A. E., 132;
- discoveries of, 154, 157;
- on Sauk Valley skull, 133
- Johnson, Frederick, traces migration routes, 21
- K
- Kay, G. F., on Minnesota man, 132
- Keith, Sir Arthur, 31, 94;
- on Lagoa Santa craniums, 130;
- recognizes Australoid in America, 218
- King, C. J., discoveries of, 178-79
- Kingsborough, Lord, 129;
- believes Indians to be Lost Tribes, 15
- Koch, A. C., 120-21;
- discoveries of, 154
- Kroeber, Alfred L., on cultural diffusion, 244-45;
- on number of languages, 5
- L
- Lagenaria gourd, 258
- Lagoa Santa caves, 121, 127, 130-32, 135, 142
- Larkin, Frederick, on Indian domestication of mammoth, 194
- Leakey, L. S. B., and discovery of Zinjanthropus, 86;
- on paleolithic pottery sherds, 38
- Leechman, Douglas, traces migration routes, 21
- Leighton, M. M., on finds at Elm Creek Silts, 162-63;
- on length of residence of man in New World, 31;
- on Minnesota man, 132
- Lemert, Edwin M., discoveries of, 160
- Lewis, Gilbert N., on neolithic culture in Andes, 256
- Libby, Willard F., xi;
- and dating through radiocarbon, 95, 96, 165, 179, 278
- Lubbock, Sir John, on division of paleolithic and neolithic ages, 36
- Lund, P. W., 121;
- discoveries of, 130
- Lyell, Sir Charles, 121;
- on late survival of mastodon in New World, 197
- M
- MacClintock, Paul, on Minnesota man, 132
- MacNeish, Richard S., 266;
- dates corn, 273
- Magdalenian man, in ancestry of American Indian, 218, 285-86;
- hypothetical migration of, 25;
- in Old World, 107, 126
- Man, “age” of, 43;
- and his early diet, 40, 41;
- -apes in Africa, 85-87;
- Australoid, 214-15, 217-18;
- Australoid or Negroid ancestry of, in New World, 31, 42, 210, 219-20, 223-24, 248-49, 279;
- as descendants of Adam, 119-21;
- dividing line between ape and, 85-87;
- existence of glacial, 63, 64, 288-92;
- giant ancestors of, 83, 84;
- length of residence in New World of, 2-7, 9, 28, 31, 56, 112, 124-42, 180-88, 277, 288-92, 294;
- location of sites in New World of, 184-88;
- Mongoloid, 207-9, 213, 215-18, 220;
- relationship of forms of, 97, 220, 279
- Mandan Indians, thought to be descendants of Welsh, 16
- Mangelsdorf, P. C., and cereal treasure, 268
- Manos, defined, 177
- Marston, A. F., discovery of Swanscombe skull by, 77
- Martin, Paul S., on extinction of mammals, 205
- Mastodon, American, 9
- Mathematics, development of, 7
- Mather, Cotton, on Dighton Rock carvings, 120;
- on giants of Holy Writ, 191
- McGee, W. J., 146
- Meade, Grayson, E., discovers Plain view point, 156
- Medicine, development of, 7
- Meganthropus palaeojavanicus, 83
- Melanesian people. See Oceanic Negrito
- Melbourne skull, 133-34
- Mendel glaciation, 47
- Mendes Correâ, A. A., and hypothesis of southern land bridge, 224
- Mercati, Michele, on origin of ancient artifacts, 143
- Mesolithic Age, 36, 37
- Mexico, prehistory of, 29, 30
- Microliths, in division of prehistory, 36
- Midland man, 139-40
- Migration of north pole, 56, 57
- Migration routes, 2, 3, 16, 17, 166;
- across Atlantic, 25;
- across Pacific, 25;
- by Antarctica, 25;
- by Bering Strait, 20, 21, 24, 128;
- early opinions on, 12-15;
- from Europe to Canada, 25;
- by Isthmus of Panama, 24
- Milling stones, 166-70;
- puzzle anthropologists, 280-81
- Milnes Milnesand points, 162
- Minnesota man, 132-33, 278;
- challenge existence of, 140
- Moir, J. Reid, 173;
- discovery of eoliths by, 67, 68
- Monkey trial, 124
- Monument Site, significance of discoveries at, 135
- Morlot, Adolphe, and glacial hypothesis, 47
- Mortillet, Gabriel de, classification of cultures by, 64, 65, 68, 87, 88;
- modification of theory of, 72
- Mounds, number in U.S. of, 7
- Mousterian. See Neanderthal
- Mu, continent of, 16, 240
- Mugharet-el-Kebara, 96
- Muscovy duck, 8
- N
- Nachahmer, Emil, quoted, 143
- Neanderthal man, 88-94, 96;
- advent of, 79, 94;
- as inventor of religion, 88;
- predecessor of, 80
- Negro slaves, thought to identify fossils of extinct mammals, 191-92
- Nelson, N. C., 120;
- on advent of Aurignacians, 100;
- on ancestors of American Indian, 285;
- on divisions of prehistory, 37;
- on European attitude toward Indians, 12;
- on Indian types, 209
- Neolithic age, daggers from, 154;
- defined, 36-39, 41, 42;
- time taken to reach, 8
- New Stone Age. See Neolithic age
- Niagara Gorge, 49
- Nordenskiöld, Baron Erland, on Indian culture, 240, 245, 247;
- on inventions unique to New World, 261-62, 264;
- on metallurgy in New World, 31, 32
- Notharctus, 2
- O
- Oceanic Negrito, 213
- Old Stone Age. See Paleolithic age
- Oreopithecus bambolii, 87
- Osborn, Henry Fairfield, on advent of Aurignacians, 100;
- on extinction of mammals, 202
- P
- Painting, 104, 171;
- as religious art, 258-59;
- by Magdalenians, 107-12, 256;
- in Spain, 112-13
- Paleolithic age, 96;
- defined, 36, 37, 41, 42, 116-17;
- progress from, 7, 8;
- sculpture of, 98
- Panpipes, 235-36, 253
- Papuan peoples. See Oceanic Negrito
- Paranthropus, 85
- Peking man, 81-85
- Penck, Albrecht, and Alpine glaciations, 47;
- on duration of glaciation, 55;
- on inter-glacial migration, 290-92;
- on length of residence of man in New World, 6, 31
- Peñón man, 138
- Percussion flaking, 88, 90, 91
- Pericú skulls, 135, 221
- Perry, W. J., 16, 239-40
- Peyroni, D., 173
- Piltdown forgery, 74-77
- Pithecanthropus erectus, 82, 89;
- cousin of, 84;
- discovery of, 81
- Pithecanthropus robustus, 89
- Plainview points, 155-56, 203. See also Folsom man, Generalized
- Playfair, John, and glacial hypothesis, 46
- Pleistocene. See Great Ice Age
- Plesianthropus, 85
- Pliocene Period, 67, 68, 87
- Pluvials, 59, 131, 170, 292-94;
- defined, 52
- Polished ax, social use of, 39
- Population of New World in 1492, 5
- Postglacial Period, definition of, 45
- Pottery, in association with animal fossils, 194-95;
- Aurignacian, 113;
- cord-marked, 229;
- in dating, 247;
- as factor in neolithic life, 38;
- invention in New World of, 54
- Pressure flaking, 93, 280;
- by Solutreans, 104, 283
- Prestwich, Sir Joseph, 64, 67
- Protestant dogma, 122, 124;
- influence on archeology of, 63
- Punin man, 131-33;
- question of antiquity of, 195;
- resemblance to Australian skulls of, 218
- Putnam, F. W., 124
- Putnam, General Rufus, 120
- Pygmy, as exception to Negroid headshape, 210;
- as preceding Australoid in New World, 225-27