"MISSING LINKS" MILLER 447 



BIBLIOGRAPHY 



Not the least extraordinary feature of the controversy over human 

 " missing links " is the abundance and diversity of the literature in 

 which writers have put forward their contending views. While the 

 general reader will probably find enough to satisfy his curiosity in 

 the summary of opinions which I have presented, the more technical 

 student may wish to consult the original sources. I have therefore 

 prepared a rather extended bibliography of the Java man and the 

 Piltdown man. Under neither heading have I attempted to assemble 

 a complete list of titles, but I believe that the list includes the more 

 essential articles which have appeared up to the end of the year 

 1928, including all those wdiich are alluded to in the text of this 

 article. For the Piltdown man I published two bibliographies in 

 my papers of 1915 and 1918. In the present list I am entering all 

 the titles which I have found since then. They are marked with 

 asterisks. 



THE JAVA MAN, PITHECANTHROPUS 



Adloff, p. Einige Besonderlieiten des menschliclien Gebissps iind ihre stam- 

 mesgeschichtliche Bedeutimg. Zeitschr. f. Morph. und Anthrop., Vol. 10, pp, 

 106-121, 1907. 



Pithecanthropus is an anthropoid in no way ancestral to man (p. 107). 

 Amoedo, O. Les dents dn Pifhccanthropiis erectus de Java. C. R. Ass. Franoaise 

 Adv. Sci. 1901, pp. 1193-1197. figs. 1-2. 1902. 



The worn tooth is an anterior (not second) molar. 

 Bebry, Edwajrd W. The age of Pithecanthropus erectus. Science, n. s., Vol. 

 37, pp. 418-420, March 14, 1913. 



Notice of Schuster, 1911. Age of deposits undoubtedly Pleistocence. but 

 the more exact dating undertaken by Schuster not justified. 



Bekry, Richaed J. A. and Robertson, A. W. D. The Place in Nature of the 

 Tasmanian Aboriginal as Deduced from a Study of his Calvarium. Part 1 : 

 His Relations to the Anthropoid Apes, Pithecanthropus, Homo primi genius, 

 Homo fossilis and Ho^no sapiens. Proc. Roy. Soc. Edinburgh, vol. 31, pp. 

 41-69, Dec. 8, 1910. 



Important comparisons. Accepts Pithecanthropus without question but 

 deals with cap only. 



Boule, Maecellin. Fossil Men (translated by J. E. and J. Ritchie from the 

 second French edition, 1923). 



Pithecanthropus, pp. 93-110. 

 Branca, W. Vorlaufiger Bericht iiber die Ergebnisse der Trinil-Expedition der 

 Akademischen JubilJiums-Stiftung der Stadt Berlin. Sitzungsber. k. p. Akad. 

 Wissensch., Berlin, 1908, pp. 261-273. 



Preliminary notes on the Selenka expedition. The Pithecanthropus beds 

 are of Pleistocene age. 



