The same acute and industrious observer has inquired into a number of similar cases in different parts of the United States, and finds all liable to objections on the above grounds, except in a few cases when the alleged implements are probably not artificial.... The Canadian Record of Science - Page 3921893Full view - About this book
| Geological Society of America - 1894 - 740 pages
...probably not artificial. These observations not only dispose, for the present at least, of paleolithic man in America, but they suggest the propriety of...years ago on the basis of American analogies, but the Lycllian doctrine of modern causes as explaining ancient facts seems as yet to have too little place... | |
| Sir John William Dawson - 1893 - 332 pages
...* " Fossil Men," Hodder & Stoughton, London, 1880. t Science, Nov., 1892. Journal of Geology, 1893. museums in the world. The evidence of age was not,...causes as explaining ancient facts seems as yet to have too little place in the science of Anthropology. It may be added that Wright, in recent papers, attempts... | |
| Sir John William Dawson - 1893 - 342 pages
...in America, but they suggest the propriety of a revision of the whole doctrine of " palaeolithic " and " neolithic " implements as held in Great Britain...causes as explaining ancient facts seems as yet to have too little place in the science of Anthropology. It may be added that Wright, in recent papers, attempts... | |
| Geological Society of America - 1894 - 736 pages
...probably not artificial. These observations not only dispose, for the present at least, of paleolithic man in America, but they suggest the propriety of...Lyellian doctrine of modern causes as explaining ancient tacts seems as yet to have too little place in the science of anthropology. The question, however,... | |
| Sir John William Dawson - 1894 - 240 pages
...in America, but they suggest the propriety of a revision of the whole doctrine of ' palaeolithic ' and ' neolithic ' implements as held in Great Britain...represent merely local or temporary exigencies, or the debr1s of old workshops, as any difference of time or culture. For the present, therefore, we may afford... | |
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