User:Tannertsf/Sandbox/Cambridge Ancient History Vol. 1/Chapter I: Primitive Man, in Geological Time

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Primitive Man, in Geological Time (1928)
by J. B. Bury
954957Primitive Man, in Geological Time1928J. B. Bury
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Page:Thecambridgeancienthistoryvol1.djvu/81 Page:Thecambridgeancienthistoryvol1.djvu/82 Page:Thecambridgeancienthistoryvol1.djvu/83 Page:Thecambridgeancienthistoryvol1.djvu/84 Page:Thecambridgeancienthistoryvol1.djvu/85 Page:Thecambridgeancienthistoryvol1.djvu/86 Page:Thecambridgeancienthistoryvol1.djvu/87 is the circumstance, not so generally appreciated, that the forest zone itself is nowhere untenanted by man, and that in favourable circumstances within that zone other solutions were found for the problem not merely of maintaining life but of acquiring reserves of vitality which permitted aggressive exploitation, and engendered a culture appropriate to the forest régime.