Questions Evolution Does Not Answer 
always as upstanding as Homo 
sapiens to-day. He goes on to add: 
“As yet, there is no actual connec¬ 
tion with ape-like forms ancestral 
to both the modern apes and 
(Lull, “Evolution of Man,” p. 38.) 
One more paragraph from Lull will 
show how vain is the effort to prove 
from prehistoric remains man’s 
pithecoid ancestry. He says: “Sup¬ 
posedly associated with the Poxhall 
flints” (which are placed in the 
upper Pliocene) “was found a 
human jaw which unfortunately 
can not now be located. If it could 
be found, and the certainty of asso¬ 
ciation be determined, it would far 
antedate both that of Piltdown and 
of Heidelberg. The figure which 
Osborn published of this jaw, from 
the original, by Collyer, in 1867, is 
remarkable in that it is the jaw of 
Homo sapiens, if correctly drawn, 
and not primitive at all. But this 
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