630 



INDEX. 



Pauilhaic, large flint flakes found at, 



90. 



Pausanias cited, 120. 

 Peas found in Lake-dwellings, 218. 

 Peat-bogs, antiquities in, 228. 

 Peat of Somme Valley, 375. 

 Peck, Captain, relics found by him 



near Ontonagon river, 283. 

 Pengelly, Mr., his researches, 233, 



3 r 5> 3*6. 



Penn's treaty with Indians, 279. 



Penpits, 56, 82. 



Pentateuch, its mention of bronze and 



iron, 5. 



Percy, Dr., letter to the author, 606. 

 Perils of wild animals and men, 



594- 

 Periods of American history, 284. 



Peru, stone circles in, 119. 



Petavius, 384. 



Petrie, Mr., on early references to 



Orkney circles, 119. 

 Pewaukee animal mounds, 275. 

 Pfahlbauten or Lake-villages, 16, 181. 

 Phillips, Prof., 315. 

 Phoenician art imperfectly represented 



in our museums, 77- 

 colonies and commerce, 71. 

 commerce and Bronze Age, 



64. 

 trade with Britain and 



Spain, 74. 

 supposed knowledge of 



America, 277. 

 ,. supposed knowledge of 



Norway, 74. 

 Physical geography and ethnology, 



385. 

 Picts' houses described, 57, 141. 



Picture-writing, 278. 



Pigorini, Prof., 54. 



on early Italian remains, 183. 



Piles for Lake-dwellings, 96. 



Pileworks, chronological place of, 214. 



Pillows of earthenware, 223. 



Tine-tree in Denmark, 237, 251. 



Pins of bronze, 36-39, 233. 



Piquigny, finds at, 21 ; alleged ex- 

 ample of bronze Roman sword 

 found there, 21. 



Plants of Lake-men, 217. 



Plato, 66. 



Pliny on foundation of Utica, 71. 

 on bison, 304. 

 mentions sacred lakes, 222. 



Pliocene period, man supposed to have 

 lived in, 424. 



Polecat, 319. 



Polybius on voyage of Pytheas, 67. 

 Polygamy of Australians, 452. 

 Polynesian infanticide, 467. 

 Pompeii, no bronze swords or celts 



found at, 22. 



Pond-barrows, 139, note. 

 Pont de Thiele, find at, 16, 391. 

 Pontlevoy, find at, 423. 

 Ponzi, and remains of reindeer from 



Campagna, 300. 

 Poole, Mr., quoted, 586. 

 Population of hunting countries, 357. 

 increases with the civiliza- 



tion of peoples, 592. 

 scanty in primitive times, 



355-. 



scanty in barbarous coun- 



tries, 357. 



Portraits, odd notions about, 528. 

 Pottery from shell-mounds, 233, 234, 



. 243. 



from Moen, 162-165. 

 from \V. Kennet, 166-169. 

 sepulchral, 170. 

 in ancient times, 260. 

 general occurrence of, 260. 

 of Bronze Age, 198, 222. 

 of Americans, 260, 261. 

 of different ages, 17. 

 of Fijians, 456. 

 of the Stone Age, 198. 

 rudimental, 584. 

 hut-urns of, 54, 55. 

 from Wauwyl, 195. 

 substitute for, among Esqui- 

 maux, 495. 

 unknown to cave-men, 331, 



334, 549- 



the Veddahs, 437. 



Andamaners, 439. 



Australians, 442. 



Maories, 463. 



in Tahiti, 478. 



unused by Patagonians, 533. 



Fuegians, 541. 



Pourtalis, Count, finds human bones in 



calcareous conglomerate, 286. 

 Prado, M. de, discovery near Madrid, 



360. 



Precy, discovery at, 343. 

 Precession of equinoxes, 403. 

 Pre-historic races of men, 175. 



times, Palgrave on, I. 



Pressigny le Grand, flint implements 



made there, 87. 

 Prestwich, Mr., researches of, 233, 



.316, 351, 359. 

 visits Abbeville, 342. 



