Page:Early Man in Britain and His Place in the Tertiary Period.djvu/553

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plements (note), 162; implements in Somme Valley, 164; in Spain, Italy, and Greece, 164; Africa, 165; Palestine, 166; India, 166; implements found at Grenelle, 168; implements, Wookey Hole, near Wells (figs.), 193; implement manufactory at Cissbury, 278; mines, Neolithic, near Brandon, 276; river-drift implement, Gray's Inn Lane (fig.), 157; found at various places (note), 160; scraper, Robin Hood Cave (fig.), 182; splinters, found in Meiocene strata, put forward as evidence of existence of man, 68.

Floras, Secondary and Tertiary, 9; mid Eocene, 28; of American continent in Meiocene age identical with that of Europe, 43; of Bovey Tracey, 48; identified with lower Meiocenes of France and Switzerland, 49; of the Hebrides and Ireland, 49; Meiocene, on the Continent, 49; the Pleiocene, 77, 78; floras of the Polar regions (note), 22. See Forests.

, on the implements of the Somme Valley, 164.

Food of Neolithic man, 273, 274.

, Edward, on geographical continuity in Pleiocene age, 74.

Forests in early Pleistocene age in Britain, 125; (mid Eocene) of Bournemouth, 29; bed, fauna of, 128; bed, physical relations of, 129; bed, physical relations of (fig.), 130; early Pleistocene, in France, 131 submerged in the Prehistoric period, 248; submerged. Sir H. de la Beche and Godwin-Austen on, 248; of Neolithic age, 304.

Fossil and living forms, percentage of, in the Tertiary strata, 10, 11.

Fowling, 218.

Fox (Canus vulpes), 98; arctic (Canis lagopus), 99; arctic, 100, 257, 262; implements found in Acton gravel, 158.

, Lane, on flint mines of Cissbury, 278; on camps of Neolithic tribes, 283; on existence of a Copper age in Europe (note), 398.

, on the ape species Colobus, 58; on Cave-men of Germany, 204.

France, Cave-men found in, 204; opossums in, 33; birds around the upper Eocene lake of Paris, 33; upper Eocene forests of, inhabited by Primates, 34; table of Meiocene classification of, 39; inhabited by man in middle of Meiocene age, 67; lower Pleiocene mammalia of, 79; upper Pleiocene mammalia of, 80; River- drift man in, 164; caves of, River- drift men preceded Cave-men in, 198; in the Bronze age, 379; in the late Bronze age, 381; origin of present inhabitants, according to Dr., 325; physical characters of the people, 326; cremation and inhumation practised in Bronze age, 381; tin mines in Bronze age, 403.

, on red amber, 418; on designs of the prehistoric Iron age, 438.

, E. A., on race and language, 323.

French bronze articles of Bronze age, analysis of, 408; mid Eocene mammalia, 30.

Fruit of lower Eocene period, 26; of the Neolithic age—apple, 293; raspberry, strawberrv, blackberry, sloe, 294.

Fruits cultivated by Neolithic inhabitants, 300.

Future state, belief in, by Neolithic tribes, 287.

Gallus æsculapii (fowl), 61.

, Starkie, on the dispersion of the Tertiary floras, 20; on the tropical vegetation of the lower Eocene period, 26; on the temperature of Britain in the mid Eocene age, 35; on the Hempstead beds (note), 41.

, on the Glacial period of Meiocene age, 65; on height of Alps in Pleistocene and Pleiocene age, 120.

, on the Pleiocene forests of Italy, 77.

, on classification of Eocene strata, 16; on the Necrolemur (note), 34; on the Eocene mammalia of France (note), 27; on the Meiocene classification in France and Germany, 39; on the flint flakes of the Meiocene age at Thenay, 68.

Gaul and Spain, Celtic invasion of, in the Neolithic age, 315.

Gazelle (gazella), 40.

Geese, 59, 303.

, James, 115, 117; on climate of Britain, when forests now submerged were living, 255; Palæolithic river-strata are interglacial, 171.

Genera (living) in Meiocenes of Europe, 40.