Questions Evolution Does Not Answer 
absence of human or pre-human re¬ 
mains in all those deposits which 
have furnished in such rich abun¬ 
dance the remains of other land 
animals. ’ ’ (Wallace , i 6 Darwinism, ’ ’ 
p. 458.) 
Remains of prehistoric man thus 
far discovered have been very 
meager (indeed, they might all be 
put in a barrel), and have utterly 
failed to justify faith in man’s ape¬ 
like ancestry. We have heard much 
of some of these remains. 
1. The Trinil ape-man of Java, 
generally referred to as “ Pithe¬ 
canthropus/ ’ is considered the old¬ 
est of these remains, and is declared 
to be approximately five hundred 
thousand years old. The fragments 
consist of a skull-cap, three teeth 
and a left femur. They were found 
scattered through twenty yards of 
space, and were not all discovered 
at the same time. 
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