. Annual report of the Board of Regents of the Smithsonian Institution . Bronze Implements. Fig. 1. Bronze hatchet (first style); standard 2. Bronze hatchet (second style); standard 3. Bronze hatchet (third style); standard 4. Bronze hatchet (fourth style); standard 5. Bronze arrow-point; 6. Bronze arrow-point; 7. Bronze fish-hook; single barbFig. 8. Bronze fish-hook; double-barbed. A STUDY OF PREHISTORIC ANTHROPOLOGY. 629 stone, sixteen of bronze, and four of iron. This is highly imperfect, forI know many stations not noted, a
. Annual report of the Board of Regents of the Smithsonian Institution . Bronze Implements. Fig. 1. Bronze hatchet (first style); standard 2. Bronze hatchet (second style); standard 3. Bronze hatchet (third style); standard 4. Bronze hatchet (fourth style); standard 5. Bronze arrow-point; 6. Bronze arrow-point; 7. Bronze fish-hook; single barbFig. 8. Bronze fish-hook; double-barbed. A STUDY OF PREHISTORIC ANTHROPOLOGY. 629 stone, sixteen of bronze, and four of iron. This is highly imperfect, forI know many stations not noted, and where noted as one they reallyinclude several stations. At Chevroux, Lake Neuchatel, I found twelvestations, of which seven belonged to the neolithic and five to thebronze age, yet they are noted at only one of each. An idea of the ex-tent of these stations may be obtained from the fact that they containfrom ten thousand to one hundred thousand piles. I drew one out at»Estavayer, Lake Neuchatel, and brought it home, and it and its castare now in the Smithsonian In
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