Page:Early Man in Britain and His Place in the Tertiary Period.djvu/550

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522
INDEX.

114-122; of the Prehistoric period, 255.

Clothing and ornaments of Bronze folk in Britain, 355.

Coast-line (south-eastern) of Britain during the Eocene age, 17.

Cocchi, discovery of a human skull at Olmo, 91.

Codrington, on river deposits, 154.

Cœnopithecus (of the order Primates), 34.

Coffins in the Bronze age, 368.

Coin of Claudius in pile-dwelling of Marin (note), 291.

Coinage, probable origin of, 414.

Coins and commerce in the Iron age, 438.

Colobus (C. grandævus) (ape), 58.

Commerce of Neolithic tribes, 280.

Commercial relations of Britain in the Bronze age, 421.

Continent north of the Alps, Prehistoric Iron age on the, 439.

Continental upper Eocene mammalia, 32; Meiocene flora, 49.

Continuity of Europe with North America in Meiocene age, 43.

Conwell, Eugene, discoveries at Lough Crew, 433.

Cope on the existence of Primates in North America, 34.

Copper, no age in Europe, 397; celts in Ireland, 397; supposed by Pliny to have derived its name from Cyprus, 399; distribution of ores, 399.

Cormorants, 59.

Corselet, golden, Mold, North Wales (fig.), 432.

Corylus grossidentatus (hazel), 49.

Coryphodon, 22, 27.

Crags of Norfolk and Suffolk, the Pleiocene strata of Britain, 71; Red, 71.

Crane, 55; (Grus cinerea), 219.

Crannoges, or Irish lake-dwellings, 353.

Crayford, flint-flake discovered at, 136; brick-earths at Stoneham's Pit (fig.), 141.

Cremation in the Bronze age, 367; various authorities on, 367; carried on in Iron age, 429.

Cro-Magnon, rock shelter of, encampment for Cave-men, 206; detailed section of (fig.), 207.

Croll, on Glacial period of Meiocene age (note), 65; climate and time (note), 115.

Cresswell Caves, oldest fauna in, 186, 187; Pin Hole, 176.

Cresswell Crags, looking east (fig.), 175.

Culture, further development of, 342.

Cups, drinking, 361; incense, 361; gold, 360; amber, 361; for reception of offerings to the dead, 378.

"Cup-stones," 338, 339.

Cuvier quoted on the Adapis, 34.

Cypresses: Solenostrobus, Frenelites, Callitritis, 26, 50.

Cyprus, copper supposed by Pliny to have derived its name from, 399.

D

Dagger-handle, Laugerie-Basse (fig.), 223.

Dahomey pile-dwellings, 292.

Danubian centre of bronze industry, 414.

Darwin, evolution theory of, 7; on hairy Siamese family, 223; on the Chillingham cattle, 260; on the Neolitic dog, 295; on the hog, 296.

Dasornis (bird), 28.

Dawson on the dispersion of the Tertiary floras, 20.

Davies, W., referred to, concerning Eocene mammals (note), 26.

Davis on physique of Neolithic population, 310.

Dead little cared for by Eskimos, 235; burial of the, by Neolithic tribes, 284.

Deer (Cervus, 40, 143, 166; (mid Meiocene—fig.), 56; resembling the muntjak, 59; (Cervus australis), 79; (Cervus dicranios), 84; antlers, development of, 88; (fallow), 96, 98; of the Carnutes (Cervus Carnutorum), 104; thick-antlered (verticornis),104; Sedgwick's, 126.

Definition of Prehistoric period, 247.

Deinotherium (mid Meiocene—fig. ), 56, 59.

Denise, fossil man of, 93.

Denmark, diadem of bronze, 389; battle-axe, 390; axe plated with gold, 390; shield in repoussé, 391; gold cup, 392; shell mounds of, 302.

Denudation since the Meiocene age, 46.

Depression during the Nummulitic age, 17; period of, in Glacial period, 117, 118.

Derivations of Basque names for cutting tools according to Abbé Inchauspé, 334.

Designs of Bronze age in France and Britain (fig.), 378.

Desnoyers, J., on cut bones found at St. Prest, 133.}}