WHOLE VOL. SKELETAL REMAINS OF EARLY MAN HRDLICKA 25 1 



Professor Marett. in 1 916. is that " La Cotte de St. Brelade is entitled 

 to rank as a pure Mousterian site, as rich and representative in its 

 way as almost any in Europe." 



ADDITIONAL LITERATURE 



Keith, A., and Knowles, Francis H. S. A description of teeth of Palae- 

 olithic man from Jersey. Bull. Soc. Jersiaise, Vol. 37, pp. 223-240, 191 2. 

 Also Journ. Anat. and Phys., Vol. 46, pp. 12-27, 1911. 



Marett, R. R. Pleistocene man in Jersey. Archaeologia, Vol. 62, pp. 449-480, 

 Oxford, 191 1. 



. Further observations on prehistoric man in Jersey. Published by Soc. 



Antiq. London, 1912. 



. The site, fauna, and industry of La Cotte de St. Brelade, Jersey. 



Archaeologia, Vol. 67, pp. 75-118, Oxford, 1916. 



AND DE Gruchy, G. F. B. Excavation of a further portion of La Cotte 



de St. Brelade. Bull. Soc. Jersiaise, Vol. 38, pp. 326-330, 1913. 

 SiNEL, J. Prehistoric times and men of the Channel Islands. Jersey, 137 pp., 



1914. 

 AND NicoixE, E. T. Report on the exploration of the palaeolithic 



cave-dwelling known as La Cotte, St. Brelade, Jersey. Bull. Soc. Jersiaise, 



Vol. 36, pp. 69-74, 191 1. 

 : Report of the resumed exploration of "La Cotte," St. Brelade, 1911. 



Bull. Soc. Jersiaise, Vol. 37, pp. 213-219, 1912. 



THE FOSSIL MAN OF LA CHAPELLE-AUX-SAINTS 



One of the most interesting, best authenticated, and thanks to 

 Marcellin Boule now best-known skeletons of early man. is that of 

 " the fossil man of La Chapelle-Aux-Saints." La Chapelle-Aux- 

 Saints is a small village in the Department of Correze, near the small 

 railroad station of Vayrac, south of the town of Brive, in southern 

 France. A little over 200 yards from the village and beyond the left 

 bank of the small stream Sourdoire, in the side of a moderate elevation, 

 is a cave, now known as that of La Chapelle-Aux-Saints (pi.. 64). In 

 1905 archeological exploration of this cave was undertaken by three 

 Correze priests, the Abbes A. and J- Bouyssonie and L. Bardon. These 

 explorations which from the beginning were successful, resulting in 

 the recovery of numerous industrial and other vestiges of paleolithic 

 man, progressed gradually until the uniform archeological stratum 

 was nearly exhausted, when, on August 3, 1908, in the floor of the 

 cave, the excavators came across a shallow artificial fossa in which 

 lay remnants of the bones of a remarkal)le human skeleton. 



The human bones were carefully gathered and sent to Professor 

 Boule, at the Museum d'Histoire Naturelle, Paris, where they were 

 cleaned and as far as possible restored ; and the following December 

 Professor Boule demonstrated the skull, giving at the same time the 



