THE ORIGIN AND ANTIQUITY OF MAN 73 



is made. With tlicsc warnings in mind we may proceed 

 to the study of })rehistoric man's tools. 



FriJiii Korror, " Urgcscliichtc dcs EuropScrs," 



FKiLRK 27. Stone Iniplemoiits of tlio onrly Paleolithic Period, 

 Str^pyan and ( liclloan. 



Mr. Marett tells of a cave in Jersey, near the bay of 

 St. Brelade, where anthropologists dug down through 

 some twenty feet of clay and rock rubbish, probably car- 

 ried there in the course of the last ice age by some glacial 

 torrent, and discovered a prehistoric heartli with the 

 large stones that had pro])i)(Ml u]) the fire, and even some 

 ashes. Bones were found in a heap of food-refuse, 



