WHOLE VOL. SKELETAL REMAINS OF EARLY MAN — HRDLICKA I7I 



ADDITIONAL LITERATURE 



BouLE, M., AND Anthony. L'encephale de riiomme fossile de la Chapelle-aux- 



Saints, L'Anthrop., Vol. 22, pp. 129-196, 191 1. 



. L'homme fossile de la Chapelle-aux-Saints. Paris, 1913. 



Broca, p. Cranes et ossements humains des cavernes de Gibraltar. Bull. Soc. 



Anthrop. Paris, Vol. 4, pp. 145-158, 1869. 

 Busk, G. On the ancient or Quaternary fauna of Gibraltar. Trans. Zool. Soc, 



London, Vol. 10, 1879. 

 De Quatrefages, A., and Hamy, E. T. Crania ethnica, p. 21, figs. 18 and 19, 



1882. 

 Schwalbe, G. Studien zur Vorgeschichte des Menschen. Z. Morph. und An- 

 throp., Sonderh., 1906. 

 Sera, G. L. Nuove osservazioni ed induzioni sul cranio di Gibraltar. Arch, per 



I'Antrop. e la Etnol., Firenze, Vol. 39, Fasc, pp. 152-212, 1909. 

 . Di alcuni caratteri importanti sinora non rilevati nel cranio di Gibraltar. 



Atti d. Soc. rom. di antrop., Roma, Vol. 15, 14 pp., 1909. 

 SoLLAS, W. J. On the cranial and facial characters of the Neanderthal race. 



Phil. Trans. Roy. Soc. London, Ser. B, Vol. 199, pp. 281-339, 1907. 

 The skull is dealt with also in all the general treatises on Prehistory. 



THE CHILD SKULL OF GIBRALTAR 

 For the discovery of this interesting specimen, science is indebted 

 to Miss Dorothy Garrod, English prehistorian. The specimen was 

 found in June, 1926, embedded in hard rock in some Mousterian 

 deposits fronting a small cave opposite the ruin of " Devil's Tower," 

 in the eastern face of the north front (Spain front) of the Rock of 

 Gibraltar, not very far from the Forbes Quarry, in which in 1848 

 was discovered the adult Neanderthaloid skull of Gibraltar. The find 

 and the specimens recovered were described by Miss Garrod, Pro- 

 fessors Buxton and Elliot Smith, and Miss Bate, before the Royal 

 Anthropological Institute, November, 1927, and the several reports 

 were published in the Journal of the Institute.' The details of the 

 find are given by Miss Garrod ; the main points are as follows : 



The Mousterian site at Devil's Tower was discovered in 1917 by the Abbe 

 Breuil, then acting as diplomatic courier between Gibraltar and the French Naval 

 Bureau at Madrid (i). In the course of a visit to the North Front of the Rock 

 he noticed fragments of fossil-bone in the talus of a small cave or rock-shelter 

 at the foot of the immense vertical peak of Rock-Gun, immediately opposite a 

 ruin known as the Devil's Tower. M. Breuil was unable to follow up this dis- 

 covery at the time, but in 191 9 he returned to Gibraltar and with the help of the 

 late Colonel Willoughby Verner dug a trial trench a little way dt)wn the talus of 

 the shelter, unearthing a number of animal bones and four stone implements of 



'Garrod, D. A. E.. with L. H. 1). Buxton, G. Elliot Smith, and D. M. A. Bate, 

 E.xcavation of a Mousterian Rock-Siielter at Devil's Tower, Gibraltar. Journ. 

 Roy. Anthrop. Inst., Vol. 58, pp. 19-113, 7 pis., 25 figs., 1928, 



