(4 



4. '4 



44 44 



INDUSTRIAL PROGRESS DURING THE YEAR 1874. cxxiii 



Victoria Cave Settle, Yorkshire England. 



King Arthur's Cave Monmouthshire. 



Wookey Hole Somersetshire. . . 



Brixham Cave Devonshire 



Kent's Hole " 



Plass-Newydd Wales. 



Long Hole 



Hyle's Cave " 



Gailenreuth near Muggendorf Franeonia. 



Moustier Pe'rigdrd France. 



La Madelaine 



Laugerie Haute 



,augene nasse 



Gorge d'Enfer " " 



("1 ~\T 4 4 4 4 



-ro-Magnon 



T TJ 4 4 4 4 



Les Eyzies 



LaMentone " " 



Belgian caves of EngliLi, Chauvaux, Engihoul, Neanderthal (?), Trou 

 de Trontu. 



Asia. Reference was made last year to Dr. Schliemaiin's 

 interesting discoveries in the plain of Troy. He found there 

 implements of stone in layers covering* those that contained 

 articles of copper, bronze, and gold, together with pottery of 

 good workmanship. These facts, so totally at variance with 

 the general results of archaeological investigations, have elic- 

 ited much comment. A comparatively civilized tribe mav 

 have been supplanted by a rude tribe unacquainted with 

 metals. He has published "Trojan Antiquities; Report on 

 the Excavations in Troy, with an Atlas containing 218 Pho- 

 tographic Plates explaining the Text. Leipsic, Brockhans." 



In the Atlienmun, May 9, 1874, is an account of Mr. J. P. 

 Wood's excavations of the Temple of Ephesus. 



It is well known that General Di Cesnola, whose wonderful 

 discoveries in Cyprus excited so much attention, and whose 

 collections are now the property of the Metropolitan Muse- 

 um of Art in New York, signified his intention, after deposit- 

 ing his earlier gatherings, of returning to his field of labor, 

 and of continuing his investigations on a larger scale with 

 the funds thus acquired. This promise he has carried out, 

 and the discoveries now making bid fair to nearly, if not en- 

 tirely, equal in interest those of his former explorations. He 

 has already found some localities where the works of man in 

 his earliest and most primitive condition have been detected, 



