INDEX. 



525 



plemcnts (note), 162 ; implements in 

 Somme Valley, 164 ; in Spain, Italy, 

 and Greece, 164 ; Africa, 165 ; Pales- 

 tine, 166 ; India, 166 ; implements 

 found at Grenelle, 168 ; implements, 

 "VVookey Hole, near Wells (figs.), 

 193 ; implement manufactory at 

 Cissbury, 278 ; mines, Neolithic, 

 near Brandon, 276 ; river-drift im- 

 plement, Gray's Inn Lane (fig.), 157; 

 found at various places (note), 160 ; 

 scraper, Kobin Hood Cave (fig. ), 182 ; 

 splinters, found in Meiocene strata, 

 put forward as evidence of existence 

 of man, 68. 



Floras, Secondary and Tertiary, 9 ; 

 mid Eocene, 28 ; of American con- 

 tinent in Meiocene age identical 

 with that of Europe, 43 ; of Bovey 

 Tracey, 48 ; identified with lower 

 Meiocenes of France and Switzerland, 

 49 ; of the Hebrides and Ireland, 49 ; 

 Meiocene, on the Continent, 49 ; the 

 Pleiocene, 77, 78 ; floras of the Polar 

 regions (note), 22. See Forests. 



FLOWER, on the implements of the 

 Somme Valley, 164. 



Food of Neolithic man, 273, 274. 



FORBES, Edward, on geographical con- 

 tinuity in Pleiocene age, 74. 



Forests in early Pleistocene age in 

 Britain, 125 ; (mid Eocene) of 

 Bournemouth, 29 ; bed, fauna of, 

 128 ; bed, physical relations of, 129 ; 

 bed, physical relations of (fig. ), 130 ; 

 early Pleistocene, in France, 131 ; 

 submerged in the Prehistoric period, 

 248 ; submerged, Sir H. de la Beche 

 and Godwin - Austen on, 248 ; of 

 Neolithic age, 304. 



Fossil and living forms, percentage of, 

 in the Tertiary strata, 10, 11. 



Fowling, 218. 



Fox (Canis vulpes), 98 ; arctic (Canis 

 lagopus), 99 ; arctic, 100, 257, 262 ; 

 implements found in Acton gravel, 



Fox, Lane, on flint mines of Cissbury, 

 278 ; on camps of Neolithic tribes, 

 283 ; on existence of a Copper age in 

 Europe (note), 398. 



FRAAS, on the ape species Colobus, 58 ; 

 on Cave-men of Germany, 204. 



France, Cave-men found in, 204 ; opos- 

 sums in, 33 ; birds around the upper 

 Eocene lake of Paris, 33 ; upper 

 Eocene forests of, inhabited by Pri- 

 mates, 34 ; table of Meiocene classi- 

 fication of, 39 ; inhabited by man in 



middle of Meiocene age, 67 ; lower 

 Pleiocene mammalia of, 79 ; upper 

 Pleiocene mammalia of, 80 ; River- 

 drift man in, 164 ; caves of, River- 

 drift men preceded Cave-men in, 198 ; 

 in the Bronze age, 379 ; in the late 

 Bronze age, 381 ; origin of present 

 inhabitants, according to Dr. BROCA, 



325 ; physical characters of the people, 



326 ; cremation and inhumation prac- 

 tised in Bronze age, 381 ; tin mines 

 in Bronze age, 403. 



FRANKS, on red amber, 418 ; on designs 

 of the prehistoric Iron age, 438. 



FREEMAN, E. A., on race and language, 

 323. 



French bronze articles of Bronze age, 

 analysis of, 408 ; mid Eocene mam- 

 malia, 30. 



Fruit of lower Eocene period, 26 ; of 

 the Neolithic age apple, 293 ; rasp- 

 berry, strawberry, blackberry, sloe, 

 294. 



Fruits cultivated by Neolithic inhabit- 

 * ants, 300. 



Future state, belief in, by Neolithic 

 tribes, 287. 



G 



Gallus cesculapii (fowl), 61. 



GARDNER, Starkie, on the dispersion 

 of the Tertiary floras, 20 ; on the 

 tropical vegetation of the lower 

 Eocene period, 26 ; on the tempera- 

 ture of Britain in the mid Eocene 

 age, 35 ; on the Hempstead beds 

 (note), 41. 



GASTALDI, on the Glacial period of 

 Meiocene age, 65 ; on height of Alps 

 in Pleistocene and Pleiocene age, 120. 



GAUD IN, on the Pleiocene forests of 

 Italy, 77. 



GAUDRY, on classification of Eocene 

 strata, 16 ; on the Necrolemur (note), 

 34 ; on the Eocene mammalia of 

 France (note), 27 ; on the Meiocene 

 classification in France and Ger- 

 many, 39 ; on the flint flakes of the 

 Meiocene age at Thenay, 68. 



Gaul and Spain, Celtic invasion of, in 

 the Neolithic age, 315. 



Gazelle (gazella), 40. 



Geese, 59, 303. 



GEIKIE, James, 115, 117 ; on climate 

 of Britain, when forests now sub- 

 merged were living, 255 ; Palaeolithic 

 river-strata are interglacial, 171. 



Genera (living) in Meiocenes of Europe, 

 40. 



