34 Report of a Journey Around the World. 



Principal Groups of Specimens, 

 i. prehistoric. 



f Paleolithic period: British Islands, France, Egypt, 



India, Africa, Tasmania (recent). 

 I Cave period. 

 n 1 , . , J Kitchen middens, ancient and modern, 



uroupea Dy period. -Neolithic period: British Islands, France, Swiss and 

 Italian lakes, Italy, Greece, Scandinavia. 

 I Stone celts (axes and adzes) in geographical and 

 ( morphological groups. 



( Hammer-stones, pounders, rubbing-stones, etc. 

 I Cores and flakes, worked-jlakes . 

 j Scrapers. 



I Knives, lance-lieads, etc. 

 Grouped by form j Arrowheads, 



and locality. j Manufacture of stone implements, methods used. 



| Natural forms. 

 j Modern gun-flint making. 

 I Forgeries. 

 y Ha fling of stone and s/ietl implements. 



Use of bone, ivory and horn in manufacture of implements. 

 Bronze age. — 



Age of copper. 



Age of bronze: Celts (development of forms), knives, razors, 

 chisels, daggers and swords, spear-heads, arrow-heads, mace- 

 heads, rings, etc. 

 Iron age. — 



Early axes and adzes, spear-heads and arrow-heads, swords and 

 daggers. 



II. ARTS OF LIFE. 



War and the chase: Clubs; boomerangs; spears and lances; instruments 

 for throwing spears; arrows, quivers; bows, cross-bozos, bullet botes, 

 bloTo-guns; archer's arm-guards, bow-string pullers; many-pointed 

 spears; harpoons; slings, bolas; axes and adzes; ha/bards; glaives, 

 swords, daggers and knives; fighting-rings (cost us, etc.); fire-arms. 

 Defensive arms: Parrying-sticks and shields, body armor, helmets. 



Food: Fishing appliances, traps, agricultural implements, grinding mills, 

 cooking utensils, strainers, etc. 



Fire making (domestic and ceremonial): Illumination {lamps, candles, 

 torches). 



Pottery: Hand-made pottery, wheel-made pottery ; substitutes for pottery. 



Clothing: Covers and garments, head gear, foot gear, umbrellas and sun- 

 shades, fans and fly-tvhisks, spinning, string-making, string and net- 

 work, weaving; basketry; bark-cloth. 



[182] 



