462 ANNUAL REPORT SMITHSONIAN INSTITUTION, 19 2 8 



* Ramstrom, Martin. Der Piltdown-Fund. Bull. Geol. Inst. Upsala, vol. 16, 

 pp. 261-304, figs. 1-12, 1919. 



*Ramstrom, Martin. Der Java-Trinil-Fund " Pithecanthropos " oder konnen 

 die " Eoanthropos "- und " Pithecanthropos "- Funde uns zuverliissige 

 Aufschliisse iiber die Antliropogenesis geben? Upsala Lakarefurenings Fijr- 

 handl., N. F., vol. 26, Festskr. Prof. J. Aug. Hammar, art. 29, pp. 1-37. 1921. 



RuTOT, A. Quelques decouvertes recentes relatives aux races humaines primi- 

 tives. Bull. See. Beige Geol., Free- Verb., vol, 27, pp. 5-6. 1913. 



ScHWALBE, G. Kritische Besprechung von Boule's Werk: " L'Homme fossile 

 de la Chapelle-aux-Saints." Zoitsclir. fiir Morphologie und Anthropologic 

 vol. 16, pp. 227-610. Jan. 31, 1914. 



Piltdown skull and jaw, pp. 603-^. Not willing to accept tlie suggestion 

 that skull and jaw did not beloing to one individual, but considers the 

 facts too uncertain to form basis of positive opinion. 



*ScHWAXBE, G. Die Abstammung des Menschen und die alteren Menschen- 

 formen. Die Kultur der Gegenwart, pt. 3, sect. 5, Anthropology, pp. 223-336. 

 1923. 



Seba, G. L. Un preteso Hominida miocenico: Sivapithecus indicus. Natura, 



vol. 8, pp. 149-173. 1917. 



Eoanthropus, pp. 170-171. Accepts association of jaw with skull. The 

 teeth, on account of their height, would perhaps be better compared with 

 those of a primitive Dryopitltecus than with those of a chimpanzee. 



Sebgi, G. La mandibola umana. Revista di Antropologia, Roma, vol. 19, pp. 



119-168, numerous text figs. 1914. 

 Sergi, G. L'Evoluzione organica e le origini uraane, pp. I-XXII, 1-240. 



Torino, 1914. Eoanthropus, pp. 192-198 and note on p. 236. 



Accepts association of skull with jaw, and concludes that the form of 

 the mandible is enough to make the Piltdown man a new type, a new 

 branch, and therefore a new genus. 



♦Sergi, G. Problem! di scienze contemporanea (Nuova serie). Chapter entitled 

 " Paleantropologia," 1916. 



Eoanthropus, pp. 111-117. The teeth are human ; the symphsial region of 

 the mandible has a form which is neither human nor anthropoid. The 

 skull and jaw belonged to one individual, and the genus Eoanthropus is 

 valid. 



Smith, G. Elliot. Appendix [to paper by Dawson and Woodward]. Abstr. 

 Proc. Geol. Soc. London, session 1912-13, p. 22. Dec. 28, 1912. 



Smith, G. Elliot. Preliminary Report on the Cranial Cast [of Piltdown skull]. 

 Quart. Journ. Geol. Soc. London, vol. 69, pp. 145-147. March 1913. Issued 

 Apr. 25, 1913. 



Smith G. Elliot. The Piltdown Skull. Nature, vol. 92, p. 131. Oct. 2, 1913. 



Smith, G. Elliot. The Controversies Concerning the Interpretation and Mean- 

 ing of the Remains of the Dawn Man Found Near Piltdown. Nature, 

 vol. 92 pp. 468^69. Dec. 18, 1913. 



Smith, G. Elliot. The Controversies Concerning the Interpretation and Mean- 

 ing of the Remains of the Dawn Man Found Near Piltdown. Mem. and Proc. 

 Manchester Lit. and Philos. Soc, vol. 59, pp. VII-IX. Mar. 31, 1914. 



"That the jaw and cranial fragments . . . belonged to the same 

 creature there had never been any doubt on the part of those who have 

 seriously studied the matter" (p. VIII). The author believes that "When 

 man was first evolved the pace of evolution must have been phenomenally 

 rapid." He alludes to " the turmoil incident to the inauguration of the 

 Pleistocene Period " (p. IX). 



