INDEX. 



ABOU-EL-CASSIM, and sale of ivory in 

 the tenth' century, 107. 



Acacias, 51. 



Acheuleen, epoch of the Palaeolithic 

 age, 199. 



Achilles, shield of, 410. 



Acton gravel (fig.) 159, 160. 



ADAMS, Leith, the discovery of main- 

 moth, etc., in Ireland, 152 ; doubts 

 existence of Irish elk in peat, 258. 



Adapts (of the order Primates), 34 ; 

 classified by CUVIER with the Anop- 

 lotheres, 34 ; GERVAIS on the same 

 (note), 34. 



Africa, River-drift man in, 165. 



Agriculture of Neolithic age, 300 ; of 

 Bronze age, 368. 



Alca impennis (auk), 303. 



Alders, 51, 125. 



ALLEN, J. A., history of American 

 bison (note), 190. 



Almond trees, 51. 



Alpine chain in Meiocene age, 62. 



Amber necklace, Lake, Wilts (fig. ), 

 357 ; cup found at Hove, 361 ; the 

 distribution of, 417 ; possessed by 

 the Emperor Nero, 418 ; employed 

 for purposes of ornament in the Neo- 

 lithic age, 419 ; rarely used in the 

 Bronze age in Scandinavia, 419 ; 

 quantity collected in Prussia in year 

 1770, 418 ; also obtained from Den- 

 mark, France, Spain, and Italy, 418 ; 

 red variety, 418. 



Amphibians of the Meiocene age, 64. 



Amphlcyon (fox-like animal), 32. 



Amphitraguhcs (deer-like animal), 32. 



Analysis of British Bronze articles of 

 Bronze age, 408 ; of French, 409. 



Anchilophus, 30. 



Anchithere, 22, 31, 54, 57. 



Ancient stone implements, supersti- 

 tions concerning, 335, 336. 



Ancylotherium, 61. 



ANDROS, antler of reindeer found by, 

 at Victoria Docks, 260. 



Animal life common to Britain and 

 America, proves connection between, 

 22. 



Animals, evidence from distribution of 

 as to European geography, 109. 



Anona (custard apple), 48. 



Anoplothere, 22, 143. 



Anoplotherium, 32 (fig.), 33. 



Antelope (Antilope), 40, 143, 166 ; 

 cordieri, 80 ; rupricapra (chamois), 

 101 ; (saiga), 96, 98. 



Anthracotheriiim, 54. 



Antlers of the deer (figs. ), 60, 81, 82 

 84, 85 ; development of ; 88, not 

 possessed by deer in the lower 

 Pleiocenes, 89 ; rod made from (fig. ), 

 185 ; harpoon heads of (figs.), 201. 



Apamasan lake, pile-dwellings, 292. 



Ape (mid Meiocene) (fig.) 56 ; in 

 mid Meiocene forests, 57 ; in mid 

 Meiocene forests, identified by RUTI- 

 MEYER with the genus Hylobates, 

 57 ; considered by FORSYTH MAJOR 

 and GERVAIS to indicate an extinct 

 genus Pliopithecus, 58 ; in mid Meio 

 cene forests, Dryopithecus Fontani, 

 Colobm grandcevus, Oreopithecus, 58 ; 

 existed in France during Meiocene 

 age, 68 ; relation to flint imple- 

 ments of Thenay (note), 68, 69 ; 

 Macacus, 79 ; Semnopithecus, 80 ; 

 appear in Europe and America during 

 Eocene period, 90 ; disappear from 

 Europe at the close of the Pleiocene 

 age, 90 ; (Barbary) introduced into 

 Gibraltar (note), 90. 



Apples, 48, 293, 302. 



Archaeology and history in their rela- 

 tion to geology, 1-12 ; continuity of 

 these three sciences, 3. 



Arctic mammalia in mid Pleistocene 

 age, presence of, 138 ; waters in North 

 Sea, existed in Pleiocene age, 74. 



Arctocyon primcevus, 27. 



Arctomys marmotta (Alpine marmot), 

 87, 101. 



Ardnamurchan, volcano, 45. 



Armoricans, the, 327. 



