[1]Erland Nordenskiöld,Modifications in Indian Customs Through Inventions and Loans(Comparative Ethnographical Studies, no. 8, 1930), 23-24.[2]Nordenskiöld, “Origin of the Indian Civilizations in South America,” inThe American Aborigines(1933), 278.[3]Ibid., 285.[4]Robert H. Lowie,The History of Ethnological Theory(1937), 165.[5]Herbert J. Spinden, “The Origin and Distribution of Agriculture in America,” inSource Book in Anthropology(1931), 228.[6]Carl Sauer, “American Agricultural Origins,” inEssays in Anthropology, ed. R. H. Lowie (1936), 281.[7]N. I. Vavilov, “Studies on the Origin of Cultivated Plants,”Bulletin of Applied Botany, vol 16, no. 2, pp. 218-219 (1926). S. M. Bukasov and others, “The Cultivated Plants of Mexico, Guatemala, and Colombia,” 47th Supplement to theBulletin of Applied Botany, 1930. Other papers listed in Henry J. Bruman, “The Russian Investigations on Plant Genetics in Latin America and Their Bearing on Culture History,”Handbook of Latin American Studies(1937), 287.[8]Bruman,op. cit., 451.[9]Sauer,op. cit., 288.[10]Bruman,op. cit., 456.[11]Richard S. MacNeish, “Agricultural Origins in Middle America and Their Diffusion into North America,”Katunob, vol. 1, no. 2 (1960), 29.[12]Harold S. Gladwin,Excavations at Snaketown(Medallion Papers, Gila Pueblo, no. 26, 1937), 2:79.[13]Bruman,op. cit., 456-457.[14]O. F. Cook, “Staircase Farms of the Ancients,”National Geographic Magazine, 29:513 (1916).[15]P. C. Mangelsdorf and R. G. Reeves,The Origin of Indian Corn and Its Relatives(Bulletin No. 574, Texas Agricultural Experiment Station, 1939), 7.[16]Ibid., 7.[17]Ibid., 8, 7.[18]Sauer,op. cit., 292.[19]G. N. Collins, “The Phylogeny of Maize,”Bulletin, Torrey Botanical Club, 57:203 (1930).[20]Bruman,op. cit., 457.[21]Sylvanus G. Morley,The Ancient Maya(1946), 386.[22]MacNeish,op. cit., 27.[23]Paul C. Mangelsdorf, “Ancestor of Corn,”Science, 128:1314 (1958).[24]Paul C. Mangelsdorf and C. Earle Smith, Jr., “A Discovery of Primitive Maize in New Mexico,”Journal of Heredity, 40:39-43 (1949), and “New Archaeological Evidence on Evolution in Maize,”Harvard University Botanical Museum Leaflets, vol. 13, no. 8, 213-247 (Mar., 1949).[25]Willard F. Libby,Radiocarbon Dating(1955), 133.[26]Junius Bird, “South American Radiocarbon Dates,” inRadiocarbon Dating(Memoirs, Society for American Archaeology, vol. 17, no. 1, pt. 2, 1951), 48.[27]Wm. Duncan Strong, ‘Finding the Tomb of a Warrior-God,”National Geographic Magazine, 91:464, 459 (1947). Junius B. Bird, “Preceramic Cultures in Chicama and Virú,” inA Reappraisal of Peruvian Archaeology(Memoirs, Society for American Archaeology, vol. 13, no. 4, pt. 2, 1948), 28. Strong, “Cultural Epochs Refuse Stratigraphy in Peruvian Archaeology,” inA Reappraisal of Peruvian Archaeology, 99.[28]Carl Sauer, personal communication, 1946.[29]Oakes Ames,Economic Annuals and Human Cultures(Botanical Museum of Harvard University, 1939), 92-93.[30]Edgar Anderson, “What Is Zea Mays?”Chronica Botanica, 9:89-90 (1945).[31]C. R. Stonor and Edgar Anderson, “Maize Among the Hill Peoples of Assam,”Annals of the Missouri Botanical Garden, 36:355-404 (1949).[32]Mangelsdorf, “Ancestor of Corn,”Science, 128:1313.
[1]Erland Nordenskiöld,Modifications in Indian Customs Through Inventions and Loans(Comparative Ethnographical Studies, no. 8, 1930), 23-24.
[2]Nordenskiöld, “Origin of the Indian Civilizations in South America,” inThe American Aborigines(1933), 278.
[3]Ibid., 285.
[4]Robert H. Lowie,The History of Ethnological Theory(1937), 165.
[5]Herbert J. Spinden, “The Origin and Distribution of Agriculture in America,” inSource Book in Anthropology(1931), 228.
[6]Carl Sauer, “American Agricultural Origins,” inEssays in Anthropology, ed. R. H. Lowie (1936), 281.
[7]N. I. Vavilov, “Studies on the Origin of Cultivated Plants,”Bulletin of Applied Botany, vol 16, no. 2, pp. 218-219 (1926). S. M. Bukasov and others, “The Cultivated Plants of Mexico, Guatemala, and Colombia,” 47th Supplement to theBulletin of Applied Botany, 1930. Other papers listed in Henry J. Bruman, “The Russian Investigations on Plant Genetics in Latin America and Their Bearing on Culture History,”Handbook of Latin American Studies(1937), 287.
[8]Bruman,op. cit., 451.
[9]Sauer,op. cit., 288.
[10]Bruman,op. cit., 456.
[11]Richard S. MacNeish, “Agricultural Origins in Middle America and Their Diffusion into North America,”Katunob, vol. 1, no. 2 (1960), 29.
[12]Harold S. Gladwin,Excavations at Snaketown(Medallion Papers, Gila Pueblo, no. 26, 1937), 2:79.
[13]Bruman,op. cit., 456-457.
[14]O. F. Cook, “Staircase Farms of the Ancients,”National Geographic Magazine, 29:513 (1916).
[15]P. C. Mangelsdorf and R. G. Reeves,The Origin of Indian Corn and Its Relatives(Bulletin No. 574, Texas Agricultural Experiment Station, 1939), 7.
[16]Ibid., 7.
[17]Ibid., 8, 7.
[18]Sauer,op. cit., 292.
[19]G. N. Collins, “The Phylogeny of Maize,”Bulletin, Torrey Botanical Club, 57:203 (1930).
[20]Bruman,op. cit., 457.
[21]Sylvanus G. Morley,The Ancient Maya(1946), 386.
[22]MacNeish,op. cit., 27.
[23]Paul C. Mangelsdorf, “Ancestor of Corn,”Science, 128:1314 (1958).
[24]Paul C. Mangelsdorf and C. Earle Smith, Jr., “A Discovery of Primitive Maize in New Mexico,”Journal of Heredity, 40:39-43 (1949), and “New Archaeological Evidence on Evolution in Maize,”Harvard University Botanical Museum Leaflets, vol. 13, no. 8, 213-247 (Mar., 1949).
[25]Willard F. Libby,Radiocarbon Dating(1955), 133.
[26]Junius Bird, “South American Radiocarbon Dates,” inRadiocarbon Dating(Memoirs, Society for American Archaeology, vol. 17, no. 1, pt. 2, 1951), 48.
[27]Wm. Duncan Strong, ‘Finding the Tomb of a Warrior-God,”National Geographic Magazine, 91:464, 459 (1947). Junius B. Bird, “Preceramic Cultures in Chicama and Virú,” inA Reappraisal of Peruvian Archaeology(Memoirs, Society for American Archaeology, vol. 13, no. 4, pt. 2, 1948), 28. Strong, “Cultural Epochs Refuse Stratigraphy in Peruvian Archaeology,” inA Reappraisal of Peruvian Archaeology, 99.
[28]Carl Sauer, personal communication, 1946.
[29]Oakes Ames,Economic Annuals and Human Cultures(Botanical Museum of Harvard University, 1939), 92-93.
[30]Edgar Anderson, “What Is Zea Mays?”Chronica Botanica, 9:89-90 (1945).
[31]C. R. Stonor and Edgar Anderson, “Maize Among the Hill Peoples of Assam,”Annals of the Missouri Botanical Garden, 36:355-404 (1949).
[32]Mangelsdorf, “Ancestor of Corn,”Science, 128:1313.
[1]Clark Wissler, “The Origin of the American Indian,”Natural History, 53:313 (1944).[2]Frank H. H. Roberts, Jr., “The New-World Paleo-Indian,”Smithsonian Institution Annual Report for 1944, 406.[3]Earnest A. Hooton,Up from the Ape, 1931, 568.[4]Junius Bird, personal communications, 1945-1947.[5]A. P. Okladnikov, “Archaeological Data on the Ancient History of the Lake Baikal Region,”Review of Ancient History, vol. 1, pt. 2, fig. 5 (Moscow, 1938). Henry B. Collins, Jr., “Eskimo Archaeology and Its Bearing on the Problem of Man’s Antiquity in America,”Proceedings, American Philosophical Society, 86:229-230 (1943), fig. 5.[6]George Gaylord Simpson, “Mammals and Land Bridges,”Journal, Washington Academy of Sciences, 40:153 (1940).[7]Bruce Howe and Hallam L. Movius, Jr.,A Stone Age Cave Site in Tangier(Papers, Peabody Museum, vol 28, no. 1, 1947). Gertrude Caton-Thompson, “The Levalloisian Industries in Egypt,”Proceedings, Prehistoric Society, 1946, new ser., 12:57-120.[8]Carleton S. Coon,The Races of Europe(1939), 46.[9]W. J. Sollas,Ancient Hunters and Their Modern Representatives(2nd ed., 1915), 485-487, 510-513, 520.[10]Aleš Hrdlička, “The Coming of Man from Asia in the Light of Recent Discoveries,”Proceedings, American Philosophical Society, 71:401 (1932).[11]Nels C. Nelson, “The Antiquity of Man in America in the Light of Archaeology,” inThe American Aborigines, ed. Diamond Jenness (1933), 116.[12]M. R. Harrington,Cuba Before Columbus, pt. 1 (Indian Notes and Monographs, Museum of the American Indian, 1921), 1:205-206, andGypsum Cave, Nevada(Southwest Museum Papers, no. 8, 1933), 189-190.[13]Thomas Jefferson,Notes on the State of Virginia, 1801, 148.[14]Hallam L. Movius, Jr.,Early Man and Pleistocene Stratigraphy in Southern and Eastern Asia(Papers, Peabody Museum, vol. 19, no. 3, 1944), 25-27.[15]Herbert J. Spinden,World Chronology and the Peopling of America(mimeographed Presidential Address read before the American Anthropological Society, Washington, Dec. 27, 1936), 5.[16]Herbert J. Spinden, personal communication, 1946.[17]Spinden, “First Peopling of America As a Chronological Problem,” inEarly Man(1937), 106, andWorld Chronology, etc., 5.[18]Spinden,World Chronology, etc., 4.[19]A. S. Loukashkin, “Some Observations on the Remains of a Pleistocene Fauna and of the Paleolithic Age in Northern Manchuria,” inEarly Man(1937), 327-340.[20]Spinden, “Time Scale for the New World.”Proceedings, 8th American Scientific Congress, 2:39 (1942), andWorld Chronology, etc., 2, 19.[21]Ernst Antevs, personal communication, 1946.[22]Kirk Bryan, “Geologic Antiquity of Man in America.”Science, new ser., 93:505-514 (1941).[23]Carl Sauer, “Early Relations of Man to Plants,”Geographical Review, 37:10 (1947).[24]Erwin H. Barbour and C. Bertrand Schultz, “Paleontologic and Geologic Consideration of Early Man in Nebraska,”Bulletin, Nebraska State Museum, 1:431 (1936).[25]George F. Carter, The Idea of the Recency of Man in America (unpublished MS.).[26]Albrecht Penck, “Wann kamen die Indianer nach Nordamerika?”Proceedings, 23rd International Congress of Americanists(1930), 23-30.[27]H. V. Walter, A. Cathoud, and Anibal Mattos, “The Confins Man: A Contribution to the Study of Early Man in South America,” inEarly Man(1937), 345.[28]Kirk Bryan, “Correlation of the Deposits of Sandia Cave, New Mexico, with the Glacial Chronology,” Appendix to Hibben, “Evidences of Early Occupation in Sandia Cave” (Smithsonian Miscellaneous Collections, no. 23, 1941, vol. 99), 69.[29]Ernst Antevs, “Correlation of Wisconsin Glacial Maxima,”American Journal of Science, 243A:29 (1945) and “Dating Records of Early Man in the Southwest,”American Naturalist, 70:336 (1936). Chart in Gladwin,Excavations at Snaketown, 2:73. “Climatic History and the Antiquity of Man in California,”Reports of the University of California Archaeological Survey, 16:23-29 (1952).[30]Antevs, “Climate and Early Man in North America,” inEarly Man, 128, and “Dating Records, etc.,” 333.[31]Carl Sauer, “Geographic Sketch of Early Man in America,”Geographical Review, 34:538 (1944).[32]M. C. Burkitt,The Old Stone Age, 86-87 (1933).
[1]Clark Wissler, “The Origin of the American Indian,”Natural History, 53:313 (1944).
[2]Frank H. H. Roberts, Jr., “The New-World Paleo-Indian,”Smithsonian Institution Annual Report for 1944, 406.
[3]Earnest A. Hooton,Up from the Ape, 1931, 568.
[4]Junius Bird, personal communications, 1945-1947.
[5]A. P. Okladnikov, “Archaeological Data on the Ancient History of the Lake Baikal Region,”Review of Ancient History, vol. 1, pt. 2, fig. 5 (Moscow, 1938). Henry B. Collins, Jr., “Eskimo Archaeology and Its Bearing on the Problem of Man’s Antiquity in America,”Proceedings, American Philosophical Society, 86:229-230 (1943), fig. 5.
[6]George Gaylord Simpson, “Mammals and Land Bridges,”Journal, Washington Academy of Sciences, 40:153 (1940).
[7]Bruce Howe and Hallam L. Movius, Jr.,A Stone Age Cave Site in Tangier(Papers, Peabody Museum, vol 28, no. 1, 1947). Gertrude Caton-Thompson, “The Levalloisian Industries in Egypt,”Proceedings, Prehistoric Society, 1946, new ser., 12:57-120.
[8]Carleton S. Coon,The Races of Europe(1939), 46.
[9]W. J. Sollas,Ancient Hunters and Their Modern Representatives(2nd ed., 1915), 485-487, 510-513, 520.
[10]Aleš Hrdlička, “The Coming of Man from Asia in the Light of Recent Discoveries,”Proceedings, American Philosophical Society, 71:401 (1932).
[11]Nels C. Nelson, “The Antiquity of Man in America in the Light of Archaeology,” inThe American Aborigines, ed. Diamond Jenness (1933), 116.
[12]M. R. Harrington,Cuba Before Columbus, pt. 1 (Indian Notes and Monographs, Museum of the American Indian, 1921), 1:205-206, andGypsum Cave, Nevada(Southwest Museum Papers, no. 8, 1933), 189-190.
[13]Thomas Jefferson,Notes on the State of Virginia, 1801, 148.
[14]Hallam L. Movius, Jr.,Early Man and Pleistocene Stratigraphy in Southern and Eastern Asia(Papers, Peabody Museum, vol. 19, no. 3, 1944), 25-27.
[15]Herbert J. Spinden,World Chronology and the Peopling of America(mimeographed Presidential Address read before the American Anthropological Society, Washington, Dec. 27, 1936), 5.
[16]Herbert J. Spinden, personal communication, 1946.
[17]Spinden, “First Peopling of America As a Chronological Problem,” inEarly Man(1937), 106, andWorld Chronology, etc., 5.
[18]Spinden,World Chronology, etc., 4.
[19]A. S. Loukashkin, “Some Observations on the Remains of a Pleistocene Fauna and of the Paleolithic Age in Northern Manchuria,” inEarly Man(1937), 327-340.
[20]Spinden, “Time Scale for the New World.”Proceedings, 8th American Scientific Congress, 2:39 (1942), andWorld Chronology, etc., 2, 19.
[21]Ernst Antevs, personal communication, 1946.
[22]Kirk Bryan, “Geologic Antiquity of Man in America.”Science, new ser., 93:505-514 (1941).
[23]Carl Sauer, “Early Relations of Man to Plants,”Geographical Review, 37:10 (1947).
[24]Erwin H. Barbour and C. Bertrand Schultz, “Paleontologic and Geologic Consideration of Early Man in Nebraska,”Bulletin, Nebraska State Museum, 1:431 (1936).
[25]George F. Carter, The Idea of the Recency of Man in America (unpublished MS.).
[26]Albrecht Penck, “Wann kamen die Indianer nach Nordamerika?”Proceedings, 23rd International Congress of Americanists(1930), 23-30.
[27]H. V. Walter, A. Cathoud, and Anibal Mattos, “The Confins Man: A Contribution to the Study of Early Man in South America,” inEarly Man(1937), 345.
[28]Kirk Bryan, “Correlation of the Deposits of Sandia Cave, New Mexico, with the Glacial Chronology,” Appendix to Hibben, “Evidences of Early Occupation in Sandia Cave” (Smithsonian Miscellaneous Collections, no. 23, 1941, vol. 99), 69.
[29]Ernst Antevs, “Correlation of Wisconsin Glacial Maxima,”American Journal of Science, 243A:29 (1945) and “Dating Records of Early Man in the Southwest,”American Naturalist, 70:336 (1936). Chart in Gladwin,Excavations at Snaketown, 2:73. “Climatic History and the Antiquity of Man in California,”Reports of the University of California Archaeological Survey, 16:23-29 (1952).
[30]Antevs, “Climate and Early Man in North America,” inEarly Man, 128, and “Dating Records, etc.,” 333.
[31]Carl Sauer, “Geographic Sketch of Early Man in America,”Geographical Review, 34:538 (1944).
[32]M. C. Burkitt,The Old Stone Age, 86-87 (1933).
(In the main, the earliest instances of publication)
PAGE13. Edward Brerewood,Enquiries Touching the Diversity of Languages, and Religions, Through the Chief Parts of the World(1622—1st ed., 1614).
PAGE18. W. A. Johnston, “Quaternary Geology of North America in Relation to the Migration of Man,” inThe American Aborigines, ed. D. Jenness (1933).
PAGE19. Carl Sauer, “Geographic Sketch of Early Man in America,”Geographical Review, Vol. 34 (1944).
PAGES26and27. Harold S. Gladwin,Excavations at Snaketown: II, Comparisons and Theories(1937), and Ernst Antevs, personal communication.
PAGE44. Arthur Holmes,Principles of Physical Geology(1945). Earnest A. Hooton,Up from the Ape(1931).
PAGE48. Richard F. Flint,Glacial Geology and the Pleistocene Epoch(1947). Ernst Antevs,The Last Glaciation(American Geographical Society Research Series, no. 17, 1928). Richard F. Flint and H. G. Dorsey, “Glaciation of Siberia,”Bulletin, Geological Society of America, Vol. 56 (1945). R. A. Daly,The Changing World of the Ice Age(1934).
PAGE55. Arthur Keith,New Discoveries Relating to the Antiquity of Man(1931). Henry Fairfield Osborn,Men of the Old Stone Age(1915). Albrecht Penck and Eduard Brückner,Die Alpen im Eiszeitalter(1901-1909). Frederick E. Zeuner,The Pleistocene Period: Its Climate, Chronology and Faunal Successions(1945). H. N. Fisk,Geological Investigation of the Alluvial Valley of the Lower Mississippi River(1944). Henry Fairfield Osborn,Man Rises to Parnassus(1927).
PAGE58. George C. Simpson, “Ice Ages,”Nature, Vol. 141 (1938). Carl Sauer, “Geographic Sketch of Early Man in America,”Geographical Review, Vol. 34 (1944).
PAGE62. W. J. Sollas,Ancient Hunters and Their Modern Representatives(1911).
PAGE66. Harold Peake and Herbert John Fleure,Apes and Men(1927). J. Reid Moir,The Antiquity of Man in East Anglia(1927). E. Ray Lankester, “Rostro-Carinate Flint Implements,”Proceedings, Royal Society, Vol. 41 (1912).
PAGE71. Henry Fairfield Osborn,Men of the Old Stone Age(1915). L. S. B. Leakey,Adam’s Ancestors(3rd ed., 1935). Miles C. Burkitt,The Old Stone Age: A Study of Palaeolithic Times(1933).
PAGE74. Charles Dawson and A. Smith Woodward, “On a Bone Implement from Piltdown (Sussex),”Quarterly Journal, Geological Society of London, Vol. 71 (1917). O. G. S. Crawford,Man and His Past(1921).
PAGE82. Henry Fairfield Obsorn,Men of the Old Stone Age(1915). Hans Weinert, “Zusammenfassung des Pithecanthropus Problems,”Zeitschriften für Anatomie und Entwicklungsgeschichte, Vol. 87 (1928).
PAGE83. Gustav H. R. von Koenigswald, “Search for Early Man,”Natural History, Vol. 56 (1947).
PAGE89. Franz Weidenreich,Apes, Giants, and Men(1946). J. H. McGregor, “Restoring Neanderthal Man,”Natural History, Vol. 26 (1926). R. Verneau, “Les Grottes de Grimaldi,”Anthropologie, Vol. 2 (1906). Raymond W. Murray,Man’s Unknown Ancestors(1943).
PAGE90. Gabriel de Mortillet,Musée Préhistorique(1881).
PAGE91. W. H. Holmes,Handbook of Aboriginal American Antiquities(1919).
PAGE92.Ibid.
PAGE93.Ibid.
PAGE98. Henry Fairfield Osborn,Men of the Old Stone Age(1915).
PAGE100. John Evans,The Ancient Stone Implements, Weapons, and Ornaments of Great Britain(1872).
PAGE101. Miles C. Burkitt,The Old Stone Age: A Study of Palaeolithic Times(1933). George Grant MacCurdy,Human Origins(1924).
PAGE102. Harold Peake and Herbert John Fleure,Hunters and Artists(1927).
PAGE103. George Grant MacCurdy,Human Origins, Vol. I (1924). L. S. B. Leakey,Adam’s Ancestors(3rd ed., 1935).
PAGE105. Miles C. Burkitt,The Old Stone Age: A Study of Palaeolithic Times(1933). George Grant MacCurdy,Human Origins, Vol. I (1924). Edith Plant,Man’s Unwritten Past(1942).
PAGE106. George Grant MacCurdy,Human Origins, Vol. I (1924).
PAGE107. Thomas Wilson, “Prehistoric Art,”Report, U.S. National Museum for 1896(1898).
PAGE108. E. Lartet and H. Christy,Reliquiae Aquitanicae(1875).
PAGE108. Michele Mercati,Metallotheca, Opus Posthumum(1717).
PAGE109. Mark R. Harrington,Gypsum Cave, Nevada(Southwest Museum Papers, no. 8, 1933).
PAGE110. Emile Cartailhac and Henri Breuil, “La Caverne d’Altamira à Santillane près Santander (Espagne),”Peintures et gravures murales des cavernes paléolithiques(1906). L. Capitan, H. Breuil, and D. Peyroni, “La Caverne de Font-de-Gaume aux Eyzies (Dordogne),”Peintures et gravures murales des cavernes paléolithiques(1910).
PAGE112. Hugo Obermaier and Paul Wernert,Las Pinturas rupestres del barranco de Valltorta(1919).
PAGE113.Ibid.
PAGE114. L. Capitan, H. Breuil, and D. Peyroni, “La Caverne de Font-de-Gaume aux Eyzies (Dordogne),”Peintures et gravures murales des cavernes paléolithiques(1910).
PAGES116and117. Harold Peake and Herbert John Fleure,Hunters and Artists(1927). Arthur Keith,New Discoveries Relating to the Antiquity of Man(1931). Henry Fairfield Osborn,Men of the Old Stone Age(1915). Robert Braidwood, personal communication, 1946. Frederick E. Zeuner,Dating the Past(1946).
PAGE144. Charles C. Abbott, “The Stone Age in New Jersey,”American Naturalist, Vol. 16 (1872).
PAGE145. Israel C. Russell,The Geological History of Lake Lahontan(U.S. Geological Survey, Monograph no. 11, 1885).
PAGE147. J. Graham D. Clarke, “New World Origins,”Antiquity, Vol. 14 (1940).
PAGE152. W. J. Sollas,Ancient Hunters and Their Modern Representatives(1911).
PAGE155. H. M. Wormington,Ancient Man in North America(Denver Museum of Natural History, Popular Series no. 4, 2nd rev. ed., 1944). Edgar B. Howard, “Evidence of Early Man in North America,”Museum Journal, Vol. 24 (1935). Alex Krieger, “Artifacts from the Plainview Bison Bed,”Bulletin, Geological Society of America, Vol. 58 (1947).
PAGE157. Frank C. Hibben, “Evidence of Early Man in Alaska,”American Antiquity, Vol. 8 (1943). Frank H. H. Roberts, Jr., “Developments in the Problem of the North American Paleo-Indian,”Smithsonian Miscellaneous Collections, Vol. 100 (1940).
PAGE158. Edgar B. Howard, “Evidence of Early Man in North America,”Museum Journal, Vol. 24 (1935). W. J. Sollas,Ancient Hunters and Their Modern Representatives(1911). Edith Plant,Man’s Unwritten Past(1942). Jacques J. M. de Morgan,Prehistoric Man(1925).
PAGE159. Frank C. Hibben,op. cit.; Frank J. J. Roberts, Jr.,op. cit.
PAGE161. H. M. Wormington,Ancient Man in North America(2nd rev. ed., 1944). E. W. C. and H. H. Campbell, and others,The Archaeology of Pleistocene Lake Mohave(Southwest Museum Papers, no. 11, 1937).
PAGE162. H. M. Wormington,Ancient Man in North America(2nd rev. ed., 1944).
PAGE165. Frank C. Hibben, “Evidences of Early Occupation in Sandia Cave, New Mexico,”Smithsonian Miscellaneous Collections, Vol. 99 (1941). Bruce Howe and Hallam L. Movius, Jr.,A Stone Age Site in Tangier, Vol. 28 (Papers of the Peabody Museum, 1947). Edith Plant,Man’s Unwritten Past(1942).
PAGE168. Paul S. Martin, George I. Quimby, and Donald Collier,Indians Before Columbus(1947).
PAGE171. Mariano Barceno, “Descripción de un hueso labrado, de llama fosil,”Anales, Museo Nacional de México, Vol. 2 (1882).
PAGE179. G. F. Becker, “Antiquities from Under Tuolumne Table Mountain in California,”Bulletin, Geological Society of America, Vol. 2 (1891).
PAGE190. Edwin H. Colbert, “The Association of Man with Extinct Mammals in the Western Hemisphere,”Proceedings of the Eighth American Scientific Congress, Vol. 2 (1942).
PAGE208. Earnest A. Hooton,Up from the Ape(1931).
PAGE212. Griffith Taylor, “The Nordic and the Alpine Races and Their Kin,”American Journal of Sociology, Vol. 37 (1931).
PAGE214. L. S. B. Leakey,Adam’s Ancestors(1935). Rudolf Martin,Lehrbuch der Anthropologie, etc.(1928). E. P. Stibbe,An Introduction to Physical Anthropology(1938). Earnest A. Hooton,Up from the Ape(1931).
PAGE216. E. P. Stibbe,An Introduction to Physical Anthropology(1938). Earnest A. Hooton,Up from the Ape(1947). Herman F. C. ten Kate, “Matériaux pour servir à l’anthropologie de la presqu’île Californienne,” Vol. 7,Bulletin, Société d’ Anthropologie de Paris(1884). George and Edna Woodbury,Prehistoric Skeletal Remains from the Texas Coast(Medallion Papers, Gila Pueblo, no. 28, 1935). Louis R. Sullivan and Milo Hellman, “The Punin Calvarium,”Anthropological Papers, Amer. Museum of Natural History, Vol. 23 (1925). Aleš Hrdlička, “Early Man in America,”American Journal of Science, Ser. 4, Vol. 34, (1912). Earnest A. Hooton, “Notes on Five Texas Crania,”Bulletin, Texas Archaeological and Paleontological Soc., Vol. 5 (1933).
PAGE228. Harold S. Gladwin,Excavations at Snaketown: II, Comparisons and Theories(Medallion Papers, Gila Pueblo, no. 26, 1937).
PAGE235. Erich M. von Hornbostel,Die Musik auf den nordwestlichen Salomon-Inseln aus dem Phonogramm-Archiv des Psychologischen Instituts der Universität Berlin(1912). Erland Nordenskiöld,The Ethnography of South America as Seen from Mojos in Bolivia(Comparative Ethnological Studies, no. 3, 1924).
PAGE237. Harold S. Gladwin,Excavations at Snaketown: II, Comparisons and Theories(Medallion Papers, Gila Pueblo, no. 26, 1937). Frances Elmore, “The Casa Grande National Monument,”Arizona’s National Monuments(1945). James Wickersham, “An Aboriginal War Club,”American Antiquarian, Vol. 3 (1895). J. Imbelloni, “On the Diffusion in America ofPatu Onewa,Okewa,Patu Paraoa,Miti, and Other Relatives of theMereFamily,”Journal, Polynesian Society, Vol. 39 (1930).
PAGE250. George C. Vaillant, “A Bearded Mystery,”Natural History, Vol. 31 (1931). Matthew W. Stirling, “Great Stone Faces of the Mexican Jungle,”National Geographic Magazine, Vol. 78 (1940). Miguel Covarrubias,Mexico South(1946).
PAGE273. Paul C. Mangelsdorf and C. Earle Smith, Jr., “New Archaeological Evidence on Evolution in Maize,”Harvard University Botanical Museum Leaflets, Vol. 13, no. 8 (Mar. 4, 1949).
PAGE282. A. P. Okladnikov, “Archaeological Data on the Ancient History of the Baikal Region,”Review of Ancient History, Vol. 86 (Moscow, 1938). Henry B. Collins, Jr., “Eskimo Archaeology and Its Bearing on the Problem of Man’s Antiquity in America,”Proceedings, American Philosophical Society, Vol. 86 (1943). Edgar B. Howard, “Evidence of Early Man in North America,”Museum Journal, Vol. 24 (1935).
PAGE285. Hallam L. Movius, Jr.,Early Man and Pleistocene Stratigraphy in Southern and Eastern Asia, Vol. 19, no. 3 Papers, Peabody Museum (1944).
PAGE287. Thomas T. Paterson, “On a World-Correlation of the Pleistocene,”Transactions, Royal Society of Edinburgh, Vol. 60 (1942).
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