[Anthropology by Robert Marett]@TWC D-Link book
Anthropology

CHAPTER III
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The jaw by itself would suggest a gorilla, being both chinless and immensely powerful.

The teeth, however, are human beyond question, and can be matched, or perhaps even in respect to certain marks of primitiveness out-matched, amongst ancient skulls of the Neanderthal order, if not also amongst modern ones from Australia.
We may next consider the Neanderthal group of skulls, so named after the first of that type found in 1856 in the Neanderthal valley close to Dusseldorf in the Rhine basin.

A narrow head, with low and retreating forehead, and a thick projecting brow-ridge, yet with at least twice the brain capacity of any gorilla, set the learned world disputing whether this was an ape, a normal man, or an idiot.

It was unfortunate that there were no proofs to hand of the age of these relics.

After a while, however, similar specimens began to come in.


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