Questions Evolution Does Not Answer 
men.”— Lull . He is supposed to 
be about four hundred thousand 
years old. 
3. In the case of the Piltdown 
man, fragments of a skull, a ramus 
of the jaw with several molars in 
place, a canine tooth and two nasal 
bones were found. 
The cranium is very thick walled, 
but the “skull was nicely balanced 
on the neck, as in ourselves, imply¬ 
ing an erect posture, a rather mod¬ 
ern-looking cranium.”— Lull. 
The jaw and teeth are simian in 
character, but it is by no means 
certain that they belong with the 
skull. Henry Fairfield Osborn 
says: “Even at this writing (1918), 
it is not finally agreed that the Pilt¬ 
down jaw belongs with the Pilt¬ 
down skull, because the new evi¬ 
dence brought forward by Hr. 
Smith Woodward, although strong, 
is not deemed entirely conclusive.” 
66 
