Questions Evolution Does Not Answer 
brain in any way distinctive from 
that of existing, man. . . . The facial 
angle is equal to that of the high¬ 
est modem man. * ’— Lull. 
Most of the above prehistoric 
remains were taken from a lecture 
on 44 The Antiquity of Man,” by 
Professor Lull. 
What meager evidence we have, 
then, goes to show that prehistoric 
man was as erect in carriage and 
had about as good a head on his 
shoulders as the average modern 
man. 
Professor Lull, in giving a sum¬ 
mary of the recorded changes in 
prehistoric man, says of him: 44 Stat¬ 
ure increasing and becoming more 
erect, although the earliest known 
hominid, Pithecanthropus, was 
fully upright.” (Lull, 4 4 Evolu¬ 
tion of Man,” p. 37.) In other 
words, so far as we have any knowl¬ 
edge of prehistoric man, he was 
69 
