﻿Sellards 
  — 
  Literature 
  Relating 
  to 
  Human 
  Remains. 
  359 
  

  

  In 
  the 
  introductory 
  paragraph 
  of 
  his 
  i 
  ■ 
  Critical 
  Obser- 
  

   vations" 
  Dr. 
  Hrdlicka 
  states 
  that 
  everything 
  relating 
  to 
  

   human 
  occupancy 
  had 
  been 
  removed 
  before 
  anthropol- 
  

   ogists 
  had 
  an 
  opportunity 
  of 
  visiting 
  the 
  locality. 
  This 
  

   is 
  not 
  in 
  accordance 
  with 
  the 
  facts, 
  for, 
  as 
  everyone 
  knows 
  

   who 
  has 
  informed 
  himself 
  about 
  the 
  problem, 
  the 
  human 
  

   artifacts 
  have 
  not 
  all 
  been 
  removed, 
  and 
  anyone 
  who 
  is 
  

   interested 
  may 
  yet 
  see 
  objects 
  of 
  human 
  workmanship 
  

   in 
  place 
  in 
  this 
  formation. 
  Dr. 
  Hrdlicka 
  maintains 
  that 
  

   he 
  has 
  detected 
  discrepancies 
  in 
  some 
  of 
  the 
  writers' 
  

   statements 
  in 
  regard 
  to 
  the 
  measured 
  thickness 
  of 
  parts 
  

   of 
  the 
  section. 
  Fortunately 
  the 
  problem 
  does 
  not 
  rest 
  on 
  

   the 
  writers 
  ' 
  statements 
  or 
  observations 
  alone, 
  but 
  on 
  the 
  

   observations 
  of 
  others 
  as 
  well. 
  The 
  student 
  who 
  is 
  inter- 
  

   ested 
  in 
  the 
  question 
  of 
  the 
  age 
  of 
  the 
  human 
  remains 
  

   found 
  at 
  this 
  locality 
  will 
  do 
  himself 
  an 
  injustice 
  if 
  he 
  

   accepts 
  this 
  memoir 
  by 
  Dr. 
  Hrdlicka 
  as 
  a 
  fair 
  presenta- 
  

   tion 
  of 
  the 
  subject. 
  Rather 
  it 
  will 
  be 
  necessary 
  to 
  con- 
  

   sult 
  the 
  literature 
  as 
  a 
  whole, 
  and 
  for 
  the 
  convenience 
  of 
  

   any 
  who 
  may 
  be 
  interested 
  there 
  are 
  here 
  included 
  ref- 
  

   erences 
  to 
  all 
  the 
  publications, 
  so 
  far 
  as 
  the 
  writer 
  is 
  

   aware, 
  that 
  have 
  appeared 
  relating 
  to 
  the 
  Vero 
  deposits. 
  

   The 
  evidence 
  both 
  for 
  and 
  against 
  the 
  Pleistocene 
  age 
  

   of 
  the 
  human 
  remains 
  and 
  artifacts 
  has 
  been 
  fully 
  stated 
  

   in 
  these 
  papers. 
  In 
  the 
  judgment 
  of 
  the 
  writer 
  it 
  can 
  not 
  

   be 
  successfully 
  denied 
  that 
  at 
  this 
  locality 
  there 
  are 
  found 
  

   relics 
  of 
  human 
  workmanship 
  and 
  human 
  bones 
  in 
  asso- 
  

   ciation 
  with 
  and 
  contemporaneous 
  with 
  a 
  fauna 
  and 
  flora 
  

   that 
  elsewhere 
  and 
  heretofore 
  have 
  been 
  considered 
  Pleis- 
  

   tocene. 
  

  

  BIBLIOGKAPHY. 
  

  

  On 
  the 
  discovery 
  of 
  fossil 
  human 
  remains 
  in 
  Florida 
  in 
  association 
  with 
  

   extinct 
  vertebrates, 
  by 
  E. 
  H. 
  Sellards, 
  this 
  Journal, 
  vol. 
  42, 
  pp. 
  1-18, 
  

   July, 
  1916. 
  

  

  Human 
  remains 
  from 
  the 
  Pleistocene 
  of 
  Florida, 
  by 
  E. 
  H. 
  Sellards, 
  

   Science, 
  N. 
  S., 
  vol. 
  44, 
  pp. 
  615-617, 
  October 
  27, 
  1916. 
  

  

  Human 
  remains 
  and 
  associated 
  fossils 
  from 
  the 
  Pleistocene 
  of 
  Florida, 
  by 
  

   E. 
  H. 
  Sellards, 
  Eighth 
  Annual 
  Eeport, 
  Florida 
  Geological 
  Survey, 
  pp. 
  

   121-160, 
  pis. 
  15-31, 
  figs. 
  1-15, 
  October, 
  1916. 
  

  

  On 
  the 
  association 
  of 
  human 
  remains 
  and 
  extinct 
  vertebrates 
  at 
  Vero, 
  

   Florida, 
  by 
  E. 
  H. 
  Sellards, 
  Journal 
  of 
  Geology, 
  vol. 
  25, 
  pp. 
  4-24, 
  January- 
  

   February, 
  1917. 
  

  

  Interpretation 
  of 
  the 
  formations 
  containing 
  human 
  bones 
  at 
  Vero, 
  Florida, 
  

   by 
  Eollin 
  T. 
  Chamberlin, 
  Journal 
  of 
  Geology, 
  vol. 
  25, 
  pp. 
  25-39, 
  January- 
  

   February, 
  1917. 
  

  

  On 
  reported 
  Pleistocene 
  human 
  remains 
  at 
  Vero, 
  Florida, 
  by 
  Thomas 
  

   Wayland 
  Vaughan, 
  Journal 
  of 
  Geology, 
  vol. 
  25, 
  pp. 
  40-42, 
  Januarv-Febru- 
  

   ary, 
  1917. 
  

  

  Am. 
  Jour. 
  Sci.— 
  Fourth 
  Series, 
  Vol. 
  XLVII, 
  No. 
  281.— 
  May, 
  1919. 
  

   25 
  

  

  