24 SMITHSONIAN MISCELLANEOUS COLLECTIONS VOL. 65 



Elliot, G. F. Scott. Prehistoric Man and His Story. London and Phila- 

 delphia, 1915, pp. I-XIV, 1-398, 64 illustr. and diagrams. 



Piltdown woman, pp. 125-129. " The jaw in some respects resembles 



that of a young chimpanzee .... Though there are a few distinctively 



ape-like characters, most of those points in which the skull differs 



from modern man can be detected in one or another of the primitive 



races. If so, she is the only representative known of one of the very 



earliest strains of mankind, perhaps the very first known of the original 



' generalized world-ranging type ' from which all other varieties were 



derived" (pp. 128-129). 



Forestier, A. Periods of Prehistoric Man : Pleistocene Types, Weapons and 



Tools. Illustrated London News, vol. 143, pp. 296-297. Numerous figures. 



August 23, 1913. 



Accepts Keith's reconstruction of jaw. 

 Giuffrida-Ruggeri, V. Dawson (Ch.) e Woodward (A. S.). On the dis- 

 covery of a palaeolithic skull and mandible in a flint-bearing gravel over- 

 lying the Weal den (Hastings Beds) at Piltdown, Fletching (Sussex). 

 Arch. Antrop. e Etnol, Firenze, vol. 43, pp. 184-186. 1913. 



Review. Doubts the distinctness of the genus Eoanthropus from 

 Homo. "In ogni caso sin d'ora appare che 1' 'Eoanthropus' non e un 

 fossile ben chiaro, como nuovo genere, e che molto probabilmente 

 rientrera nei f ossili gia noti : f orse il Gibraltar e il piu vicino." 



Gregory, William King. The Dawn Man of Piltdown, England. Am. Mus. 

 Journal, vol. 14, pp. 189-200, figs. 1-11. May, 1914. 



Accepts association of skull with jaw. Compare fig. 5 with text fig. 

 in present article. 

 Haddon, A. C. Eoanthropus dawsoni. Science, n. s. vol. 37, pp. 91-92. 



January 17, 1913. 

 Hrdlicka, A. The most ancient skeletal remains of man. Ann. Rep. Smiths. 

 Inst, 1913, pp. 491-552, pis. 1-41, figs. 1-12. 



Eoanthropus, pp. 500-509. " It represents doubtless one of the most 

 interesting finds relating to man's antiquity, though seemingly the last 

 word has not yet been said as to its date and especially as to the 

 physical characteristics of the being it stands for." 



Irving, A. Some recent work on later quarternary geology and anthropology, 

 with its bearing on the question of " pre-boulder-clay man." Journ. 

 Royal Anthrop. Inst. Gt. Brit, and Ireland, vol. 44, pp. 385-393. July- 

 December, 1914. 



"The hominid Eoanthropus dawsoni (Piltdown) is undoubtedly of 



pre-chalky boulder-clay age" (p. 393). 



Keith, A. [Discussion of the Piltdown skull.] Abstr. Proc. Geol. Soc. 



London, session 1912-13, p. 23. December 28, 1912. (See also Quart. 



Journ. Geol. Soc. London, vol. 69, p. 148. March, 1913. Issued April 



25. I9I3-) 



Accepts association of skull with jaw but considers that recon- 

 struction of jaw is made to be too much like chimpanzee. 

 Keith, A. Ape-man or Modern Man? The two Piltdown skull recon- 

 structions. Illustrated London News, vol. 143, p. 245, figs. 1-6. August 

 16, 1913- 



Jaw reconstructed to hold a human dentition. 

 Keith, A. Ape-man or Modern Man? The two Piltdown skull recon- 

 structions. The case for Professor Arthur Keith's reconstruction. Illus- 

 trated London News, vol. 143, p. 282. August 23, 1913. 4 figures. 



Reconstruction of jaw to resemble as nearly as possible that of Homo. 



