WHOLE VOL. SKELETAL REMAINS OF EARLY MAN HRDLICKA 65 



GiESELER, W. Neiiere Forschungen zum Pithecanthropusproblem. Forschungen 



und Fortschritte. Vol. 4, pp. 150-151, i fig. Berlin, 1928. 

 Gregory, W. K., and Hellman, Mild. Further notes on the molars of Hesper- 



opithecus and of Pithecanthropus. Bull. Am. Mus. Nat. Hist, Vol. 48, 



Art. 13, pp. 509-526, 1923. 

 Hrdlicka, a. The most ancient skeletal remains of man. Smithsonian Rep., 



pp. 491-552, 41 pis., 12 figs., 1913. Also, 2d ed., Publ. 2300, Smithsonian 



Inst., 1916. 

 Matthew, W. D. Ape man of Java (Popular). Nat. Hist., New York, Dec, 



1928. 

 McGregor, J. H. Recent studies on the skull and brain of Pithecanthropus. 



Nat. Hist., Vol. 25, No. 6, pp. 544-559, 1925. 

 Miller, Gerrit S., Jr. Notes on the casts of the Pithecanthropus molars. Bull. 



Am. Mus. Nat. Hist., Vol. 48, Art. 13, pp. 527-530, 1923. 

 . The controversy over human " missing links." Smithsonian Rep. for 



1928. 

 MoLLisoN, Th. Fossile A'Tenschenaffen und Menschen. Grundziige der Geologic 



n, 1926. 



MoRSELLi, E. II precursore dell 'uomo (Pithecanthropus duboisii), 19 pp., 



Genoa, 1901. 

 Ramstrom, Martin. Der Java Trinil Fund, Pithecanthropes. Upsala Lakare- 



forenings forhandlingar, Vol. 26, Nos. 5-6, 37 pp., 1921. 

 Weinert, Hans. Pithecanthropus crectus. Z. Anat. und Entwicklungsgesch., 



Vol. 87, pp. 522-524, I fig., 1928. 



THE EOANTHROPUS 



The name " Eoanthropus Dawsoni" (Dawson's Dawn-Man) was 

 applied in 1912 (published in 1913) by Arthur Smith Woodward, 

 then Keeper of the Department of Geology and Paleontology, British 

 Museum (Natural History), to a number of fragments of a human- 

 like skull, a portion of a lower jaw, and a separate canine tooth, found 

 between about 1909 and 1912 in the old gravels of Piltdown, Sus- 

 sex, England. To these were added two pieces of another skull 

 and a molar tooth found by Dawson in 191 5 among the stones raked 

 off a field two miles distant. All these specimens are preserved in the 

 British Museum (Natural History), South Kensington (London). 



THE ORIGINAL FIND 



The original find was reported by Dawson and Woodward before 

 the Geological Society, London, December 18, 1912, and published 

 in the Quarterly Journal of the Society, March, 1913 ; the second find 

 being reported by Woodward in the same periodical in 191 7. The 

 original publications covering the discoveries are as follows : 



Dawion, Charles, and Woodward, Arthur Smith, On the Discovery of a Palae- 

 olithic Skull and Mandible iri a Flint-Bearing Gravel overlying the Weal- 

 den (Hastings Beds) at Piltdown, Fletching (Sussex). Quart. Journ. 

 Geol. Soc, Vol. 69, pp. 117-151, 1913. 



