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The Outline of History: Being a Plain History of Life and Mankind

Chapter 10 THE LATER POSTGLACIAL PAL OLITHIC MEN, THE FIRST TRUE MEN

Word Count: 4456    |    Released on: 01/12/2017

Pal?oli

ter Pal?olithic. § 3. The Earliest True Men Were Splendid Savages

softened towards more temperate conditions (see Map on p. 89), a different human type came upon the scene, and, it would seem, exterminated Homo Neanderthalensis.[36] This new type was probably developed in South Asia or North Africa, or in lands now submerged in the Mediterranean basin, and, as more remains are collected and evidence accumulates, men will learn more of their early stages. At present we can only guess where and how, thro

o them. The ice was receding, vegetation was increasing, big game of all sorts was becoming more abundant. Steppe-like conditions, conditions of pasture and shrub, were bringing with them vast herds of wild horse. Ethnologists (students of race) class

. It is confusing because it is still confused at the source. We know of two distinct sorts of skeletal remains in this period, the first of these known as the Cro-Magnon race, and the second the Grimaldi race; but the great bulk of the human traces and appliances we find are either without human bones or with insufficient bones for us

out the Time the True Men were Replaci

tons also of the Later Pal?olithic period, but of a widely contrasted type, with negroid characteristics that point rather to the negroid type. There can be no doubt that we have to deal in this period with at least two, and probably more, highly divergent races of true men. They may have overlapped in time, or Cro-Magnards may have followed the Grimaldi race, and either or both may have been contemporary with the late Neanderthal men. Various authorities have very strong opinions upon these points, but they are, at most, opinions. The whole story is further fogged at present by our inability to distinguish, in the absence of skeletons, w

their own and interbreed with them, it would seem that the true men would have nothing to do with the Neanderthal race, women or men. There is no trace of any intermixture between the races, in spite of the fact that the newcomers, being also flint users, were establishing themselves in the very same spots that their predecessors had occupied. We know nothing of the appearance of the Neanderthal man, but this absence of intermixture seems to suggest an extreme hairiness, an uglin

oth and the wild horse as well as the reindeer, bison, and aurochs. They ate much horse. At a great open-air camp at Solutré, where they seem to have had animal gatherings for many centuries, it is estimated that there are the bones of 100,000 horses, besides reindeer, mammoth, and bison

g of a horse's head showing what is perhaps a rope of twisted skin or tendon. But even if they tamed the horse, it is still more doubtful whether they rode it or had much use for it when it was tamed. The horse they knew was a wild pony with a beard under its chin, not up to carrying a m

savages. They drew better than any of their successors down to the beginnings of history. They drew and painted on the cliffs and cave walls that they had wrested from the Neanderthal men. And the survi

en with ornaments, weapons, and food; they used a lot of colour in the burial, and evidently painted the body. From that one may infer that they painted their bodies during life. Paint was a big fact in their lives. They were inveterate painters; they use

n's drawings begin, out of idle scratchings. The savage scratched with a flint on a smooth rock surface, and was reminded of some line or gesture. But their solid carvings are at least as old as their first pictures. The earlier drawings betray a complete incapacity to group animals. As the centuries progressed, more skilful artists appeared. The representation of beasts became at last astonishingly vivid and like. But even at the crest of their artistic time they still drew in profile as children do; perspective and the fore-shortening needed for back and front views were too much for th

ater stage also scratched and engraved designs on ivory and bone. Some of the most interesting groups of figures are carved very curiously round bone, and especially round rods o

amps to do their work, and shallow soapstone lamps in which fat could have been burnt have been found. Whether the seeing of these

larly of statuettes and wall paintings. The most esteemed of the painted caves is ascribed to the latter part of this the first of the three subdivisions of the newer Pal?olithic. The second subdivision of this period is called the Solutrian (from Solutré), and is distinguished particularly by the quality and beauty of its stone implements; some of its razor-like blades are only equalled and not surpassed by the very best of the Neolithic work. They are of course unpolished, but the best specimens are as thin as steel blades and almost as sharp. Finally, it would seem, came the Magdalenian (from La Madeleine) stage, in which the horse and reindeer were dwindling in numbers and the red deer coming into Europe.[38] The stone implements are smaller, and there is a great quantity of bon

e Estimated Duration of

, if it were on this scale, would be nearly 4 feet long, and the diagram of the whole geologica

not even positive about their relative relationship. Each lasted perhaps for four or fi

g them. These latter seem to have brought in bow and arrows; they had domesticated animals and cultivated the soil. A new way of living, the Neolithic way of living, spread over the European area; and the life of the R

s narrow and special. They had vivid perceptions, an acute sense of animal form, they had the real artist's impulse to render; so far they were fully grown human beings. But that disposition to paint and draw is shown to-day by the Bushmen, by Californian Indians, and by Australian black fellows; it is not a mark of all-round high intellectual quality. The cumulative effect of their drawings and paintings is very great, but we must not make the mistake of crowding all these achievements together in our minds as

riety of flint and bone implements, they never rose to the possibilities of using timber for permanent shelters or such-like structures. They never made hafted axes or the like that would enable them to deal with timber. There is a suggestion in some of the drawings of a fence of stakes in which a mammoth seems to be entangled. But here we may be dealing with superimposed scratchings. They had no buildings. It is not even certain that they had tents or huts. They may have had simple skin tents. Some of the drawings seem to suggest as much. I

ew these pelts. One may guess pretty safely that they painted these skins, and it has even been supposed, printed off designs upon them from bone cylinders. But their garments were mere wraps; there are no c

. Opinions differ widely. Wright lays much stress on the "great hiatus" between the Pal?olithic and Neolithic remains, while Osborn traces the likeness of the former in several living populations. In the region of the Doubs and of the Dordogne in France, many individuals are to be met with to this day with skulls of the "Cro-Magnon" type. Apparently the Grimaldi type of men has disappeared altogether from Europe. Whether the Cro-Magnon type of men mingled completely with the Neolithic peoples, or whether they remained distinct and held their own in favourable localities to the north and west, following the reindeer over Sib

communities of some little known people who are called the Azilians.[41] They may have been transition generations; they may have been a different race. We do not know. Some authorities incline to the view that the Azilians were the first wave of a race which, as we shall see later, has played a great part in populating Europe, the dark-white or Mediterranean or Iberian race. These Azilian people have left behind them a multitud

e map of the world was assuming something like its present outlines, the landscape and the flora and fauna were taking on their existing characteristics. The prevailing animals in the spreading woods of Europe were the royal stag, the great ox, and the bison; the mammoth and the musk ox had gone. The great ox, or aurochs, is now extinct, but it survived in the German forests up to the time of the Roman Empire. It was never domesticated.

sula, and perhaps Great Russia were becoming possible regions for human occupation. There are no Pal?olithic remains in Sweden or Norway

vanced, may have allowed them to wander across the land that is now cut by Bering Strait, and so reach the American continent. They spread thence southward, age by age. When they reached South America, they found the giant sloth (t

character. In America there does not seem to have been any preceding races of sub-men. Man was

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1 Chapter 1 THE EARTH IN SPACE AND TIME2 Chapter 2 THE RECORD OF THE ROCKS3 Chapter 3 NATURAL SELECTION AND THE CHANGES OF SPECIES4 Chapter 4 THE INVASION OF THE DRY LAND BY LIFE5 Chapter 5 CHANGES IN THE WORLD’S CLIMATE6 Chapter 6 THE AGE OF REPTILES7 Chapter 7 THE AGE OF MAMMALS8 Chapter 8 THE ANCESTRY OF MAN[20]9 Chapter 9 THE NEANDERTHAL MEN, AN EXTINCT RACE10 Chapter 10 THE LATER POSTGLACIAL PAL OLITHIC MEN, THE FIRST TRUE MEN11 Chapter 11 NEOLITHIC MAN IN EUROPE[45]12 Chapter 12 EARLY THOUGHT[62]13 Chapter 13 THE RACES OF MANKIND14 Chapter 14 THE LANGUAGES OF MANKIND15 Chapter 15 THE ARYAN-SPEAKING PEOPLES IN PREHISTORIC TIMES16 Chapter 16 THE FIRST CIVILIZATIONS17 Chapter 17 SEA PEOPLES AND TRADING PEOPLES18 Chapter 18 WRITING19 Chapter 19 GODS AND STARS, PRIESTS AND KINGS20 Chapter 20 SERFS, SLAVES, SOCIAL CLASSES, AND FREE INDIVIDUALS21 Chapter 21 THE HEBREW SCRIPTURES AND THE PROPHETS[157]22 Chapter 22 THE GREEKS AND THE PERSIANS[169]23 Chapter 23 GREEK THOUGHT AND LITERATURE[182]24 Chapter 24 THE CAREER OF ALEXANDER THE GREAT[195]25 Chapter 25 SCIENCE AND RELIGION AT ALEXANDRIA[203]26 Chapter 26 THE RISE AND SPREAD OF BUDDHISM[211]27 Chapter 27 THE TWO WESTERN REPUBLICS[224]28 Chapter 28 FROM TIBERIUS GRACCHUS TO THE GOD EMPEROR IN ROME29 Chapter 29 THE C SARS BETWEEN THE SEA AND THE GREAT PLAINS OF THE OLD WORLD[256]30 Chapter 30 THE BEGINNINGS, THE RISE, AND THE DIVISIONS OF CHRISTIANITY31 Chapter 31 SEVEN CENTURIES IN ASIA (CIRCA 50 B.C. TO A.D. 650)32 Chapter 32 MUHAMMAD AND ISLAM[319]33 Chapter 33 CHRISTENDOM AND THE CRUSADES34 Chapter 34 THE GREAT EMPIRE OF JENGIS KHAN AND HIS SUCCESSORS35 Chapter 35 THE RENASCENCE OF WESTERN CIVILIZATION[371]36 Chapter 36 PRINCES, PARLIAMENTS, AND POWERS37 Chapter 37 THE NEW DEMOCRATIC REPUBLICS OF AMERICA AND FRANCE38 Chapter 38 THE CAREER OF NAPOLEON BONAPARTE[448]39 Chapter 39 THE REALITIES AND IMAGINATIONS OF THE NINETEENTH CENTURY[457]40 Chapter 40 THE INTERNATIONAL CATASTROPHE OF 1914[489]41 Chapter 41 THE POSSIBLE UNIFICATION OF THE WORLD INTO ONE COMMUNITY OF KNOWLEDGE AND WILL42 Chapter 42 No.4243 Chapter 43 No.4344 Chapter 44 No.4445 Chapter 45 No.4546 Chapter 46 C. B. disagrees with J. L. M. and E. B. in his analysis of the Chinese problem. His sympathies are with the south; with the philosophy of Lao Tse. He writes as follows —