. The Quarterly journal of the Geological Society of London. Frank 0. Barlow, is shown from the left side and fromabove and below in text-figs. 4-6 (pp. 133-37). It assumes thatthe actual fossil extends just to the symphysis, and the result isdistinctly striking. The jaw is rather wide, but the nearly straightrnolar-premolar series of the two sides converge only graduallyforwards ; while both canines and incisors are, of necessity, largeand spaced. While the skull, indeed, is essentially human, only approachinga lower grade in certain characters of the brain (see pp. 145-47),in the attachment
. The Quarterly journal of the Geological Society of London. Frank 0. Barlow, is shown from the left side and fromabove and below in text-figs. 4-6 (pp. 133-37). It assumes thatthe actual fossil extends just to the symphysis, and the result isdistinctly striking. The jaw is rather wide, but the nearly straightrnolar-premolar series of the two sides converge only graduallyforwards ; while both canines and incisors are, of necessity, largeand spaced. While the skull, indeed, is essentially human, only approachinga lower grade in certain characters of the brain (see pp. 145-47),in the attachment for the neck, the extent of the temporal muscles, 1 Homo neanderthalensis var. Jcrapinensis, Kramberger, Mitth. Wien, 1902, p. 191. Homo breladensis, Keith & Knowles, & Physiol, vol. xlvi (1911) p. 12. 2 A. Nehring, Zeitscbr. fur Ethnologie, 1895, p. 338. Fig. 4.—Restoration of the Pilidoivn mandible (B), compared ivith thatof man (C) and the young chimpanzee (A), in left side view;tivo-thirds of the natural
Size: 2168px × 1153px
Photo credit: © The Reading Room / Alamy / Afripics
License: Licensed
Model Released: No
Keywords: ., bookcentury1800, bookdecade1840, booksubjectgeology, bookyear1845