Environment, Tools & Man: An Inaugural LectureThe University Press, 1946 - 30 pagine |
Dall'interno del libro
Risultati 1-3 di 3
Pagina 14
... and imagina- tion , to make that world live again before our own eyes , and through it to interpret the tools which are the instruments of Man's response to his environment . At best , our knowledge of the earliest 14.
... and imagina- tion , to make that world live again before our own eyes , and through it to interpret the tools which are the instruments of Man's response to his environment . At best , our knowledge of the earliest 14.
Pagina 15
... earliest men will remain very imperfect , but I am confident that more can be achieved than has been attempted in the past , while the later Palaeolithic cultures , with their larger range of implements , their dwelling - sites , their ...
... earliest men will remain very imperfect , but I am confident that more can be achieved than has been attempted in the past , while the later Palaeolithic cultures , with their larger range of implements , their dwelling - sites , their ...
Pagina 17
... earliest men were pacifists and vegetarians , but the evidence is against them . We know , for instance , that one at any rate of the makers of chopping - tools , Sinanthropus Pekinensis , was not only a hunter of elephant , rhinoceros ...
... earliest men were pacifists and vegetarians , but the evidence is against them . We know , for instance , that one at any rate of the makers of chopping - tools , Sinanthropus Pekinensis , was not only a hunter of elephant , rhinoceros ...
Altre edizioni - Visualizza tutto
Parole e frasi comuni
Ancient Hunters ANTHROPOLOGY archaeological side archaeologist Aurignacian bone and reindeer carving chipped stones Chopping-tool Churchill Babington classification by function comparison contemporary fauna creature of woodland D. A. E. GARROD Disney dispersed in river earth earth's face entirely of wood environment evolution examine the artefacts extent flint flourished food remains fossil found dispersed gained the power geology and palaeontology glaciation grooves Human palaeontology Inaugural Lecture incalculable influences included a fair industries Lecture BY D. A. E. lithic studies living Magdalenian maker of hand-axes mammoth Man's handiwork Man's story material method Mortillet Mount Carmel Mousterian natural sciences needs of primitive Old Stone Age ordinary burin Palaeo Palaeolithic cultures Persian fallow deer Pleistocene possible spear-heads pre-occupation prehistorian reindeer antler relics Sinanthropus Sir Ellis Minns Sollas Solutrean spear-thrower stone implements stone or bone stone tools typological classification University of Cambridge Upper Palaeolithic utilised vessels and shields weapons wooden spear woodland habitat