THE PROBLEM OF ANTIQUITY OF MAN IN AUSTRALIA 45 
ACKNOWLEDGMENTS 
To Professors J. L. Shellshear and A. N. Burkitt, Drs. J. 
Wunderly, W. R. Browne, A. B. Edwards and T. D. Campbell 
and Messrs. H. M. Hale and the late A. S. Kenyon, I am indebted 
for reading the first rough draft of this paper and for offering 
suggestions that have been embodied in its final form; to W. 
Baragwanath, Director of Geological Survey, for having the map 
and section (Plate 1) redrawn by A. E. Kennedy; to C. W. 
Brazenor for photographs used in Plate Il; and to L. A. Baillét 
of the Melbourne Technical College for photographs used in 
Plate ILI. 
APPENDIX 
In a scrapbook purchased by the Melbourne Public Library in 1889 is an 
engraving (Fig. 7) of a human head carved in wood and accompanying manuscript 
notes which are quoted below. The carving is said to have been found 60 feet 
below the surface at Creswick in 1851. It is evidently the specimen mentioned by 
Smythe (1869, p. 150), who considered it a forgery; he said that an engraving of 
it, together with letters and documents testifying to its authenticity, had been 
The Creswick Carving. 
