Annals of the South African Museum, Volume 8South African Museum, 1911 - Natual history |
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Page 2
... conclusion that the type could not have been invented in places so far apart in a spontaneous manner . Although it is quite possible that stone implements of a different character may have evolved from the growing intellectual power of ...
... conclusion that the type could not have been invented in places so far apart in a spontaneous manner . Although it is quite possible that stone implements of a different character may have evolved from the growing intellectual power of ...
Page 8
... conclude , on lithological grounds , that these South African implements do not fit in with the classification that answers to the requirements of , and is founded upon , the evidence obtained in Europe . The latter classification is ...
... conclude , on lithological grounds , that these South African implements do not fit in with the classification that answers to the requirements of , and is founded upon , the evidence obtained in Europe . The latter classification is ...
Page 24
... type , the upper face has not been fashioned first and then detached . This conclusion is borne out by most implements of that kind which I examined . It is true that in Fig . 70 , Pl 24 Annals of the South African Museum .
... type , the upper face has not been fashioned first and then detached . This conclusion is borne out by most implements of that kind which I examined . It is true that in Fig . 70 , Pl 24 Annals of the South African Museum .
Page 25
... conclusion is justified . In Fig . 63 we have a split boulder , which leads to the evolution of either the axe or cleaving tool ( Fig . 66 ) or the spade - like pick ( Fig . 67 ) . Fig . 64 is that of a water - worn boulder , bearing on ...
... conclusion is justified . In Fig . 63 we have a split boulder , which leads to the evolution of either the axe or cleaving tool ( Fig . 66 ) or the spade - like pick ( Fig . 67 ) . Fig . 64 is that of a water - worn boulder , bearing on ...
Page 30
... conclude that the sharp end and not the butt was used . That the same occurred also in the case of the tongue- , or amygdaloidal - shaped bouchers is proved by Figs . 16 , 17 , 18 , 19 , in which the transversely broken part would need ...
... conclude that the sharp end and not the butt was used . That the same occurred also in the case of the tongue- , or amygdaloidal - shaped bouchers is proved by Figs . 16 , 17 , 18 , 19 , in which the transversely broken part would need ...
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Common terms and phrases
aborigines Acheulean Africa ancient animals antiquity appear arrows artefacts Aurignacian awls Barkly West beads bouchers boulders Bush Bushman Cape Colony Cape Flats Cape Town CHAPTER Chellean chips Coldstream cave CRADOCK culture deposit diabase digging discovered dolerite edge Europe evidence examples feet figured finished flakes fragments gravel Griqua groove hafted holes Hottentots Hyæna jasper Kaffir knife-scraper kwès lithic littoral Magdalenian makers manufacture material middens mortars Mossel Bay Mousterian Mousterian type mullers Museum negroid neolithic Newman collo Nooitgedacht nuclei obtained ornaments ostrich egg-shell Paarl paintings palæoliths paring pebble pieces plainly pots pottery pounders Prieska primitive probably proved pygmies quartzite race relics remains represented resemblance Rhodesia rock rock-shelters rounded sand sand-dunes sandstone scraper-knives scrapers secondary trimming shape shells side Simondium skeletons skulls smooth Solutrian South African specimens steatopygia Stellenbosch stone implements Strand Looper Strandloopers surface thick traces Vaal River VIII water-worn West