228 



XIV. 

 XV. 



XVI. 

 XVII. 



XVIII. 



XIX. 



XX. 



XXI. 



XXII. 



XXIII. 



XXIV. 



XXV. 



XXVI. 



XXVII. 



XXVIII. 



XXIX. 



Noetling, F. — "The Antiquity of Man in Tasmania.' * 

 Papers and Proc Roy. Soc. Tas., read 1910, p. 231. 



"Did the Aborigines of Tasmania know the Arts 



of Grinding." Papers and Proc. Roy. Soc. Tas., 1911, 

 p. 105. 



"Magic Stones of the Tasmanian Aborigines." 

 The Tasmanian Naturalist, i., No. 3, 1907, p. 1. 



Prestwiok, Prof. Jos. — "On the Occurrence of Palaeolithic 

 Flint Implements in the Neighbourhood of Ightham, 

 Kent." Quart. Jour. Geo. Soc, xlv., 1899, pp. 270-297,, 

 pis. 9-11. 



"On the Age, Formation, and Successive Drift 



Stages of the Valley of the Darent, with Remarks on 

 the Palaeolithic Implements of the District." Quart. 

 Jour. Geo. Soc, xlvii., 1891, pp. 126-163, pis. 6-8. 



"On the Primitive Characters of the Flint Imple- 



ments of the Chalk Plateau of Kent, with Reference to 

 the Question of Age and Make." (a J JOur. Anthopolog. 

 Inst., 1892, p. 246; (b) Revised with Additions, 

 Collected Papers. London, 1895, pp. 49-80,' pis. 1-12. 



Quatrefages, A. de — "Hommes Fossiles et Homines 

 Sauvages." Paris, 1884. 



Roth, H. Ling — "Aborigines of Tasmania." Halifax 

 (Eng.), 1899. 



Royal Society Tasmania — Papers and Proceedings, 1873 

 (Hobart, 1874). 



Smyth, Brough — "Aborigines of Australia," ii. Mel- 

 bourne, 1878. 



Sollas, Prof. W. J. — "Ancient Hunters." London, 1911. 



Thomas, N. W..— "Natives of Australia," London, 1906. 



Tylor, Prof. E. B. — "On the Tasmanians as Representa- 

 tives of Palaeolithic Man." Jour. Anthopolog. Inst., 

 xxiii., 1894, p. 141. 



"On the Occurrence of Ground Stone Implements 



of Australian Type in Tasmania." Jour. Anthopolog. 

 Inst., xxiv., 1895, pp. 335-340. 



Warren, S. H. — "A Natural Eolith Factory beneath the 

 Thanet Sand." Quart. Jour. Geo. Soc, lxxvi., part 3 

 for 1920, p. 238. 



Windle, Prof. B. C. A. — "Remains of the Prehistoric Age 

 in England." London, 1904. 



VIII. DESCRIPTION OF PLATES. 



All figures are reproductions from photographs taken by 

 the Author. Measurements lineal. 



Plate XI. 



Photographic view of "gibber" country (stony desert), with 

 a residual "tabletop" seen in the distance. Taken near Macumba 

 Head Station. It was from this ground that the examples from 

 Macumba, mentioned in this paper, were gathered. 



Plate XII. 



Fig. 1. Claw-shaped Implement. Reduced half. Stuart 

 Creek. See Type No. 1, p. 211. [Compare ix., p. 321, figs. 33-35.] 



Fig. 2. An Eolithic type of Implement with hollow scraper 

 and cutting edge. Natural size. Stuart Creek. See Type No. 8, 

 p. 213. 



