INDEX. 



529 



LUCRETIUS on the use of iron, 425. 



LUKIS cited (note), 289. 



LYELL, Sir Charles, Antiquity of Man 

 quoted on division of Tertiary strata, 

 10 (note); on the Glacial period of 

 Meiocene age, 65 ; evidence as to 

 icebergs in Pleiocene age, 76 ; on the 

 spruce, 125 ; on cut bones found at 

 St. Prest, 133 ; relation of River-drift 

 man to the glacial phenomenon, 170 ; 

 on shell-mounds of Denmark, 303. 



LYON, on the Eskimos, 233. 



Lyons, forest near, in Pleiocene age, 

 77. 



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Macacus, 60, 79, 86, 87. 



Machairodnis, remains at Baume, 126, 

 144 ; upper canine of, Robin Hood 

 Cave (fig.), 186. 



MACENERY, Rev. J., discoveries at 

 Kent's Hole, 291. 



Magdalenien, epoch of the Palaeolithic 

 age, 199. 



MAJOR, Forsyth, on mid Meiocene 

 apes, 58 ; classification of Pleiocene 

 mammalia in the forests of the Yal 

 d'Arno, 83 ; on Pleiocene mammalia 

 of Tuscany, 92. 



Mammalia, specialisation of the, ex- 

 plained by the theory of evolution, 

 11, (fig.) 12; lower Eocene, 26; 

 mid Eocene, 30 ; British upper 

 Eocene, 31 ; upper Eocene of the 

 Continent, 32; upper Eocene (fig.), 

 33; extraordinary character of, during 

 the Eocene period, 35 ; of Meiocene 

 age in Europe, 39, 40 ; common to 

 both Europe and America in Meio- 

 cene age, 43 ; lower Meiocene, 53 ; 

 mid Meiocene, 55, (fig. ) 56 ; (land) 

 and birds of upper Meiocenes, 59 ; 

 no living specimen in the Meiocene 

 fauna, 67 ; of France (lower Pleio- 

 cene), 79 ; of France (upper Pleio- 

 cene), : ;80 ; upper Pleiocene of Italy, 

 83 ; in Pleiocene Britain, 84 ; upper 

 Pleiocene (fig. ), 86 ; of Pleistocene 

 period, 94 ; survivals from Pleiocene, 

 living and extinct species, 95 ; of 

 Pleistocene age, incoming living 

 species, 96 ; incoming Arctic species 

 of Pleistocene age, 99 ; of Pleistocene 

 period, incoming species now re- 

 stricted to cold mountainous regions, 

 100 ; of Pleistocene age, incoming 

 species now found in hot climates, 



2 



102 ; range of northern and southern 

 in Pleistocene Europe, 111 ; Pleisto- 

 cene, distribution of, regulated by 

 climate, 113 ; relation of, to glacial 

 phenomena, 121 ; the three divisions 

 of the Pleistocene age, 122 ; Pleisto- 

 cene mammalia in Britain before, 

 during, and after the Glacial period, 

 123 ; inhabiting early Pleistocene 

 forests, 126 ; mid Pleistocene, 134 ; 

 table of, 135 ; late Pleistocene, 146 ; 

 table of, 147, 148 ; late Pleistocene, 

 range of, over Britain and Ireland, 

 152 ; existing with River-drift man in 

 India, 166 ; chronological sequence 

 based on, unsatisfactory, 203 ; of 

 Prehistoric age in Britain, wild 

 group, 257, 261 ; domestic group, 

 261, 262 ; Prehistoric, 257, 261 ; of 

 Neolithic age, 304 ; Eocene, of Brit- 

 ain, 501 ; Eocene, of France, 502 ; 

 lower Meiocene of France, 505 ; mid 

 Meiocene, of France, 506 ; upper 

 Meiocene, of the continent, 509 ; 

 lower Pleiocene, of France, stage of 

 Montpellier, 511 ; upper Pleiocene, 

 of France, stage of Mont Perrier and 

 Issoire, 512 ; Pleiocene, of Italy, the 

 upper Val d'Arno, 513. 

 Mammoth (Elephas primigenius\ 104 ; 

 engraved on ivory by Cave-men, La 

 Madelaine (fig.), 105; E. LARTET 

 and FALCONER on the, 106; dis- 

 covered by BENKENDORF, 106 ; re- 

 mains in Russian Asia, 107 ; and its 

 relation to the Indian elephant, 108 ; 

 in Scotland, 152 ; in Caithness, 152 ; 

 in Ireland, 152 ; in Scotland before 

 Glacial period according to JAMIESON, 

 152; charging, Laugerie-Basse (fig. ), 



Man, not present during the Eocene 

 period, 36 ; in Europe in Meiocene 

 age, no proof of, 66, 67 ; evidence as 

 to presence of, in France and Italy 

 in Pleiocene period unsatisfactory, 

 90; reputed traces of, founded on a 

 series of cut bones from the Pleio- 

 cenes of Tuscany, 91, 92 ; River-drift, 

 99 ; in early Pleistocene strata, doubt- 

 ful evidence of, 133; presence in mid 

 Pleistocene age, evidence of, 136 ; 

 lived in the Thames Valley in late 

 Pleistocene age, 156 ; near Salisbury, 

 160 ; on the Continent, 164 ; pre-Gla- 

 cial and Glacial in Europe, and post- 

 Glacial in area north of the Thames, 

 171 ; contemporary with hippopota- 

 mus, etc., in the valley of the Ouse 



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