CREATION BY EVOLUTION 



northern Rhodesia, in South Africa, seem to show that the 

 lowest modern race that survives in the AustraHan region 

 was formerly more widely spread in the southern hemisphere. 

 One skull that appears to have belonged to a member of this 

 race, found in a cave at the Broken Hill mine, in northern 

 Rhodesia, is remarkable as having the largest bony brow 

 ridges ever seen in a human skull. It is probably an example 

 of "reversion" to a form common in some ancestral race. 



The succession of fragments of apes and men already 

 found among fossils therefore justifies the expectation that 

 further discoveries will reveal a multitude of links between 

 the lower (or animal) and the higher (or human) group. 

 The chain of life is undoubtedly complete to its uppermost 

 limit. 



REFERENCES 



BouLE, M. Les Hommes Fossiles. Paris, 1923. English Transla- 

 tion by Ritchie. Edinburgh, 1924. 



Keith, A. The Antiquity of Man. London, 1925. 



Knipe, H. R. Evolution in the Past. London, 1912. 



Lucas, F. A. Animals of the Past. Amer. Mus. Nat. Hist., New 

 York, 1922. 



Lull, R. S. Organic Evolution. New York, 1922. 



Lull, R. S. and others. The Evolution of Man. Yale Univ. Press, 

 1922. 



OsBORN, H. F. Men of the Old Stone Age. New York, 1915. 



PiRSSON, L. V. and Schuchert, C. A Text-Book of Geology. 

 New York, 1915. 



Scott, W. B. A History of Land Mammals in the Western Hemi- 

 sphere. New York, 1924. 



[136] 



