Изображения страниц
PDF
EPUB

Lizard rocks. They had been carried to Falmouth in a boat. To regain their home they had first to find their way to the mouth of the harbour, and when there, how did they know whether to steer to the right or to the left, and to travel seven miles to their native rocks?

Another, of which the drover is my informant. Large flocks of sheep are driven weekly from the Welsh hills to the London market. Some time since two escaped in the dark and were supposed to have been stolen. About a fortnight afterwards the two stray sheep reappeared on the Welsh nou tains, whence they had been brought. They had found their way through a journey of at least 100 miles. My informant learned from some of the turnpike-gate keep-rs on the road that, when opening the gate at night to a traveller, two sheep had been seen to rush through.

The nightingale returns from Greece, not merely to the same country, but to the same field and the self-same bush. The swallow takes possession of the same nest.

Carlton Club, March 31

EDWARD W. Cox, Serjeant-at-law

The Sociability of Cats

It may prove of interest to naturalists to record the following curious instance of the social habits of cats :

I once had two she cats that were upon very intimate terms with each other, always together, and never appeared to have quarrelled. At one time, one of them being about to add an increase to their number, the other very kindly nursed it, and even performed the function of a midwife, and actually attended to the necesary offices that are in ordinary cases attended to by the parent of the progeny. Feeling some interest in curiosities of natural history, I carefully watched my pets, and can therefore vouch for the truthfulness of this extraordinary manifestation of feline sociability.

I may here mention that, as regards the teachableness of cats, I once saw at the house of an intimate friend a fine, large tabby tom-cat put through a drill which would perhaps outvie similar exhibitions of the genus homo. He was told to "stand up," "shoulder arms,' 99 66 present arms," and "stand at ease," which, by observing the hands of the master, he would most obediently do, and with a promptness that was astounding. Another cat was told "to beg," which it at once did by jumping on to a Windsor chair, and performed some curious twistings and rollings that were continued until the morsel of meat was awarded. I have recently introduced a fine kitten to the company of two cats I have had for years. For a long time a deadly feeling of enmity was maintained against the stranger; but now, after a period of three months, the two older cats will not lap their morning's milk until the kitten is in their company; if absent, they actually retire, and refuse to take their meal. Red Lion Street, March 26 J. JEREMIAH

Manitoba Observatory HAVING seen in vol. vii. p. 289 of NATURE a statement to the effect that the American Government had established an observatory at Fort Garry, Manitoba, I have to inform you that the so-called observatory is a telegraph reporting station maintained by the Dominion of Canada. Its tri-daily reports, however, in common with those from several other Canadian telegraph stations in correspondence with Toronto, are always placed at the disposal of the Washington weather office. G. T. KINGSTON Magnetic Observatory, Toronto, Canada, March 11

SCIENCE CLASSES

ST. THOMAS CHARTERHOUSE TEACHERS' PRIOR to the introduction of Mr. Lowe's revised code, elementary science teaching was always to be found in the curriculum of our best primary schools. The properties of water, the constituents of some of the chemical elements, the first principles of mechanics and the like, were taught with much pleasure by the masters of the schools above alluded to 66 Payment by results" on the three R's threw cold water upon this class of intellectual teaching, and it has only been revived recently through agitation emanating from enlightened educators. Teachers of late years too have had their studies very much limited by the low requirements of the Education

department, and hence many young teachers were launched out into the teacher's profession unable themselves to impart instruction formerly given in our schools. Teachers have long been clamorous for having the standard of education raised in their schools, and have therefore hailed with great satisfaction the act of the Science and Art Department whereby additional grants are given to any pupils or adults or juveniles who could, after receiving a certain number of lessons from a qualified teacher, pass an examination on the subjectmatter of these lectures. Teachers, however, before they are permitted to give these lectures to pupils, are required to pass an advanced examination on the subjects they propose to teach. To enable teachers to pass these tests, the St. Thomas Charterhouse Teachers' Classes were inaugurated in October last. The idea was organised by Mr. C. Smith, one of the teachers and organising secretaries, and was carried out under the auspices of the Rev. J. Rodgers, M.A. To the credit of our primary teachers it ought to be added that they have since the promulgation of the idea worked most heartily to bring it to this desired consummation. Profs. Huxley, Ansted, Carruthers, Sir John Bennett, and several other scientific men joined the committee for carrying out the classes. From every part of London masters and mistresses of our elementary schools gladly joined the Science School. Over 230 teachers were initiated, and it is hoped that most of the teachers will qualify themselves in the coming May examination to be able to teach the science subjects they have studied in these classes. nucleus it is thought that next year we shall have science classes in connection with nearly every school (elementary) in the metropolis; and undoubtedly in a year or two more the inculcation of elementary general science knowledge will be almost universal.

Thus from this

Science teaching in the hands of a skilful instructor is always popular with young people, and as elementary teachers are eminently successful as collective teachers of the young, who could be better entrusted with imparting instruction which so brightens the intellect as these educators? The chief subjects taken this year at this science school are chemistry, mathematics, acoustics, light and heat, magnetism and electricity, botany (systematic and economic), geology, physiology, plane and solid geometry; but next year the promoters of the scheme hope to have classes in all the twenty-five subjects recognised by the Science Department of the Government. Most of the present students of the classes go in vigorously for physiology, physical geography, and acoustics, light and heat, a great many for chemistry. The teacher of chemistry, Mr. Spratling, has got up a first-rate laboratory for chemical experiments. Mr. Payne, teacher of magnetism and electricity, has all the approved auxiliaries for performing experiments connected with this subject. Next year the biology students will have every facility afforded them for microscopical practice. Mr. Simpson, who has done at least as much as any other person in London to train science teachers, is engaged as the special lecturer on Biology.

tific men have given a professional lecture to stimulate During the present session several of our leading scienthe teachers in their studies. Dr. Gladstone, Dr. Jarvis, Prof. Ansted, Prof. Carruthers, Mr. Tylor, Rev. W. Panckridge, Prof. Skertchley amongst the number. All the ordinary lectures are given by elementary teachers who have qualified themselves to teach. Two of the students, Mr. Bird and Mr. Powell, who have spent some of their leisure moments in making observations in botanical science, render much valuable aid to their fellow students in furnishing examples to illustrate the lessons given in botany. The students generally are pursuing their studies with great avidity, and as was observed at the Devon Social Society Gathering, by Mr. C. Clarke the importance of these classes cannot be over-estimated

[blocks in formation]
[graphic]

FIG. 23. Sculptured pointed handle, representing an elongated reindeer.

arabs" chalk on the walls, there are some really remarkable ones, which denote at the same time a clever hand and an eye practised in the observation of nature.

Drawing, with this people, evidently preceded sculpture. The figures in relief are much more rare among them than those that are carved, and likewise much less perfect. The latter are common at the Evzies and Lower Laugerie, but they abound more especially at the Madelaine, where they are also much more correct. These drawings are all carved. Most of them ornament the

FIG. 27.--Skull of the woman of Cromagnon: profile. The wound in the frontal bone is shown.

Three little roses carved on a handle in deer-horn, seem to represent a polypetalous flower. All the other drawings are representations of animals.

The most numerous are those of the reindeer, then those of the horse: the ox and the aurochs are less common. These different animals are easily distinguished; their ways, their movements are sometimes reproduced with much elegance and accuracy; often they are isolated, dispersed in apparent disorder and in numbers over the whole surface of an object; then again they form groups, they are seen fighting together (see Fig. 22), or fleeing from

[merged small][merged small][graphic][merged small][merged small][merged small][merged small][merged small]

divine;" they very rarely studied it. Only one study of a head has been found; it is a very small drawing, representing a grotesque profile. Two other drawings, pretty much alike, represent the forearm terminating in a hand with four fingers, the thumb being hidden. I have already told you that the pieces of sculpture are much more rare than the drawings. There are not more than half a dozen, and they all come from Lower Laugerie. One of them, belonging to the Marquis de Vibraye, represents a woman, another represents a reindeer (see Fig. 23).

V.-Race

To complete the study of this interesting people, I should now like to be able to characterise the race to which they belonged. The human bones that have been collected up to the present time are not, unfortunately, sufficiently numerous to satisfy our curiosity. However they suffice to prove that this race was very different from the succeeding ones, and to prove above all how much the learned anthropologist Retzius and his disciples were deceived, in stating that all the population of Western Europe, before the comparatively recent epoch of the Indo-European emigrations, belonged to the type of short heads or brachycephals.

M. Elie Massenat discovered, some months ago, at Lower Laugerie, the skeleton of a man who appears to have been buried in a landslip. But the anatomical description of this precious skeleton has not yet been published; and I regret it the more, that it is the only discovered remains of the Troglodytes of the latest epoch. The skulls and bones, of which I show you the models, belong to a much earlier date. They were found in the ancient burying ground of the station of Cromagnon, of which the geological, paleontological, and archæological characters have been ascertained with the greatest nicety by M. Louis Lartet. This sepulchre, henceforth celebrated, contained the remains of at least five people. But only three skulls, two male and one female, were sufficiently well preserved to make useful studies. One of the men had attained a great age; the other man and the woman were adults; near them lay a young child. Their stature was very lofty, and far superior to our own. The length of the femur of the old man indicated a height of more than 180m. The volume of the bones, the extent and roughness of the surfaces of muscular insertion, the extraordinary development of the branch of the jawbone, where the masticatory muscles are inserted, prove an athletic constitution.

[graphic][graphic][graphic]

FIG. 31.

Fig. 28.-Skull of the woman of Cromagnon

[blocks in formation]

ront view. Fig. 30.-Skull of the old man of Cromagnon: front view. Fig. 31. -Skull of the old man of Cromagnon, Norma verticalis as is sometimes produced by our musket balls. It is evidently the result of an old wound. It was evidently a human hand, armed with a flint weapon, which produced a long penetrating wound on the skull of the woman. The width of the opening shows that the weapon must have reached the brain. This inglorious murder of a woman does not shed lustre on the people of Cromagnon. The study of their industry has already proved that their social status was not above that of other savage nations. An examination of their skulls confirms this notion,

The tibias, instead of being triangular and prismatic like our own, are flattened like those of the gorilla (see Fig. 24. The upper part of the cubitus, very powerful and arched, supports a very small sigmoidal cavity, and its characteristics again recall the shape of the gorilla. But the conformation of the femur differs radically from that of the monkey tribe. The femur of anthropomorphal monkeys is flattened from front to back-that is to say, much wider than it is thick, and it does not present, on its posterior surface, that longitudinal elevation which in man is called the rough line. In the existing human races, the thickness of the femur is in general rather greater than its width, but the difference is inconsiderable. At Cromagnon this bone is much thicker than it is wide (see Fig. 25). The rough line, enormously developed, is no longer a simple elevation; it is a regular bony column, thick and projecting, which considerably augments the solidity of the bone and the extent of the muscular insertions. In this respect, therefore, the Cromagnon race differs much more from the Simian type than do the existing races. The skeletons of these robust Troglodytes bear the traces of their deeds of violence. One of the femurs of the old man presents, towards the lower extremity, a cavity such

With them, the sutures of the anterior region of the cranium are very simple, while those of the posterior region are rather complicated; besides which the former have a manifest tendency to close long before the latter. These two characteristics are observable in people and in individuals who live principally an animal life. The Cromagnon Troglodytes were then savages. But these savages were intelligent, and open to improvement; side by side with the proofs of inferiority I have just given, we find among them sure signs of a powerful cerebral organisation. The skulls are large. Their diameters, their curves, their capacity, attain, and even surpass, our medium skulls of the present day. Their form is very

elongated.

The alveolar process of the old man is oblique, but the upper part of the face is vertical, and the facial angle is very open. The forehead is wide, by no means receding, but describing a fine curve; the amplitude of the frontal tuberosities denotes a large development of the anterior cerebral lobes, which are the seat of the most noble intellectual faculties. If the Cromagnon Troglodytes are still savages, it is because their surrounding conditions have not permitted them to emerge from barbarism; but they are not doomed to a perpetual savage state. The development and conformation of their brain testify to their capability for improvement. When the favourable opportunity arrives, they will be able to progress towards civilisation. These rough hunters of the mammoth, the lion, and the bear, are just what ought to be the ancestors of the artists of the Madelaine.

I have just glanced over the principal facts in the history of the Troglodytes of the Vézère. For want of time, I have been obliged to shorten several and omit a number more. I hope, nevertheless, that you have been able to follow with me from Moustier to Cromagnon, from Cromagnon to Upper Laugerie and Gorge d'Enfer, and from thence finally to the three stations of the Eyzies, Lower Laugerie, and the Madelaine; the progressive evolution of an intelligent race, which advanced step by step, from the most savage state to the very threshold of civilisation. The Troglodytes of the latest epoch had, so to speak, but one step to take in order to found a real civilisation, for their society was organised, and they possessed arts and industry, which are the two great levers of progress.

This people have, nevertheless, disappeared, without leaving a single trace in the traditions of man. They did not die off by degrees, after having passed through a period of decadence. No, they perished without transition, rapidly, perhaps suddenly, and with them the torch of the arts was suddenly extinguished. Then began a dark period, a sort of middle ages, the duration of which is unknown. The chain of time becomes broken, and when we seize it again, we find, in the place of the reindeer hunters, a new society, a new industry, a new race. They are beginning to understand agriculture, they have some domestic animals, they are raising megalithic monuments, they have hatchets of polished flint. It is the dawn of a new day; but they have lost every remembrance of the arts. Sculpture, drawing, ornamentation, have alike disappeared, and we must descend to the later period of pol shed stone to find, here and there, on the slabs of some very rare monuments, a few ornamental lines which have absolutely nothing in common with the remarkable productions of art among the Troglodytes. The extinction of the Troglodytes was so complete and so sudden that it has given rise to the hypothesis of an inundation; but against this geology protests, and, to explain the phenomenon, we need only refer to the influence of man himself. Our peaceable reindeer-hunters, with their gentle manners, their light weapons, which were not adapted for fighting, were not calculated to resist the invasion of barbarians, and their growing civilisation succumbed at the first shock, when powerful conquerors, better a med for war, and al eady provided perhaps with the polished hatchet, came to invade their valleys. It was then seen, as it has often since been proved, that might conquers right.

[blocks in formation]

also simpler than the molars, and there is an extra lobe to the last milk molar. The number of existing species is very great; they tend to divaricate in two directions, one culminating in the Pigs, and the other in the Cavicorn Ruminants. The Hippopotamnus and Chevrotain at first sight do not look much alike, but the links between the two are very complete. The existing species are the most differentiated members of the order. Of the Suina, the Pigs are very exceptional among existing mammalia in retaining the typical number of forty-four teeth, Gymnura, an insectivorous animal, alone resembling them in this point; however there are spaces between some of them, so they do not form a regular series. The upper canines are very peculiar in being directed upwards instead of downwards, and in the Babirussa, where they pierce the upper lip, this is carried to an extreme. The molars are tuberculated, the tubercles being four in number in the Peccary, but much more numerous, especially in the last molars of Sus, where the extra ones represent the third lobe of the same teeth in the Ruminants. In a fossil pig from Pikermé the canines were similarly developed in both sexes, so the sexual differentiation must have been of later origin. In the Wart-hogs the incisors are rudimentary, and late in life the only molars persisting are the enormous columnar last molars; the great size of the canines is well known.

In the true Ruminantia there are no upper incisors, and he canines are but rarely developed. In the lower jaw there are eight teeth in a row along the front of the mouth, the two lateral can be proved to be canines, because in older types they are found of a different shape from the six true incisors. The anterior premolar is never developed. Kowa evsky has recently given the names Bunodont and Selenodont to the non-ruminating and ruminating members of this class, on account of the differences exhibited by their molar teeth, those in the latter presenting the ridges as a double crescent instead of in tubercles. The temporal bone and its surroundings give excellent characters whereby to separate these sub classes; the shape of the glenoid cavity and the direction of the external auditory meatus differing considerably in them. There is also no lateral notch in the palate of the pigs like those in the Ruminants. The Cervidae and Cavicorn. Ruminants also have the odontoid process of the axis peculiarly spout-shaped, whilst in the pigs it forms a simple peg, much as in man. It does not seem to have been remarked before that in this respect the Tragulida differ from the typical Ruminants, and resemble the pigs, the odontoid in them being a peg. With regard to the feet of Sus, Dr. Kowalevsky has made some important observations, having shown that the approximated sides of the two median metacarpals, which are the largest, send in towards one another processes which interlock, and that the shape of their distal articular surfaces causes them to be pressed together when the foot is to the ground. In the pigs the fibula is separate and complete, but in the Ruminants it is represented only by a small piece of bone outside the ankle; a rudiment is sometimes present above. That the deer approach the original type more than do the antelopes is evident from the facts that the upper canines are sometimes present, the crowns of the molars are shorter, and the lateral toes are present, being be-t developed on the fore-limb. The Tragulida are less differentiated in having the anterior metacarpals free and the fibula entire, though slender; the canines are wel developed in the male at least, and the glenoid cavity is as like that of the pig as of the deer. Dicotyles approaches the ruminants from the other s de, the metatarsals uniting to form a canon bone, and the foot altogether closely resembling that of Hyomoschus, though an outer toe is lost in the former. The camels are developed in a different direction, approaching the more generalised type.

Artiodactylates appear first in the middle Eocene, and therefore do not go so far back as the Perissodactylata.

Anoplotherium is from the upper Eocene of France and England only; there are two or three species. Though so early a form, it was much specialised, and its peculiarities have not been retained in more modern nor existing forms. It was about the size of the ass. The teeth formed an unbroken series, and, as in man, they were uniform in height. The upper molars were much as in Palæotherium, and the lower were a modification of the same type. Nineteen dorso-lumbar vertebræ were present; the tail was very long, with large chevron bones, which are not found in other Ungulata, and from which Cuvier somewhat rashly inferred that the animal was aquatic. The odontoid process of the axis was simple. In the feet there were only two toes before and behind; the metacarpals were quite separate. In one species there were four toes in front and three behind. Elotherium or Entelodon is another form from the lowest Miocene. It has been found in the middle of France and in the Mauvaises Terres of Dakotah. Its skull was elongated and somewhat pig-like, but the orbit was completed behind by bone. In size it approached the tapir. The teeth were somewhat carnivorous, the canines being long and bear-like, and the premolars trenchant; the fortyfour teeth were present; the posterior molars were comparatively small, and the last one in the lower jaw had scarcely a rudiment of a third lobe. As in Anoplotherium there were only two toes on each foot, and the metacarpals and metatarsals were free.

Of the Suide many fossil species are known; the first appear in the upper Miocene of Eppelsheim and Pikermé, those in the litter locality much resembling the existing forms, the teeth only being less differentiated. There are no fossil true pigs in America. In the earlier and middle Miocene of Germany and France close allies are found in abundance, with the teeth simpler, only four tubercles being present, and the last molar not being excessively developed. One of these, Amphichorus, had very long canines pointing downwards in the upper jaw. Hyotherium comprises Palæocharus and Charotherium, the latter a small animal described by Leidy. There is a perfect transition between Palæochoerus and the fossil true pigs. Going further back it is doubtful how the line of descent continues. Acertherulum of Gervais may have had some relation to it. The American peccaries are peculiar in having only three premolars; in the fore-foot the outer toe is much reduced, and in the hind foot it is lost; a canon bone is formed by the metatarsals. Fossil peccaries have been found by Lund in Pleistocene caves of the United States, and in the American Miocene, scattered teeth of pig-like animals are not uncommonly met with.

Of recent hippopotamuses there are two species which have been further separated into different genera by Leidy, Charopsis being the smaller and more pig-like; in it also the teeth are not so complicated, and it has two fewer lower incisors. In both genera the molars are very characteristic, being raised in four cusps, each of which in the little worn tooth is trefoiled on the surface; as the tooth gets more used these run together to form ultimately a single insula, undulated at the borders. In the Pleistocene caves and gravels of England, France, Germany, and elsewhere, remains of Hippopotamus amphibius are numerous, some are larger than existing individuals, but they do not otherwise differ. In Sicily a smaller species is found in enormous numbers. There are no hippopotamuses in the Miocene nor in the lower Pliocene. In Madagascar a smaller species used to abound. Falconer, in the Sevalik Hills, found remains of true hippopotamus with four incisors, but most from that region belonged to a distinct form in which all the six were present, and which has been named Hexaprotodon. There is no complete bridge between these animals and the pigs, and none have occurred in America.

Dr.

teresting point in the construction of the limbs of the different members of this class. He has shown that there are two methods by which the extremities may be supported on the carpus and tarsus respectively. In one, the inadaptive, the digits as they reduce in number, still are only supported by the carpals which originally articulated with them in the pendactylate foot. In the adaptive method, as the digits reduce, they enlarge their bases of attachment on the carpus, and so get a firmer support. This latter condition is found in all existing Artiodactylates except Hippopotamus.

Of the Selenodonts one of the earliest known is Charopotamus from the upper Eocene of Montmartre; it was about the size of a pig, with the molars characteristic, presenting five tubercles, three in the anterior row, and two behind. Anthracotherium had similar molars, its limbs are unknown. Hyopotamus though but little known, was once very abundant; the species varied in size from that of a large rat to that of Anthracotherium: it is only found in the Eocene and early Miocene of Europe and North America. The molars were formed on the same principle as those in Choropotamus, but they were more drawn out; the lower formed double crescents with an internal tubercle well developed; the typical forty-four teeth were present. Most had four toes, and feet very pig-like. Kowalevsky found some at Hordle with only two, and he has named these Diplopus. Between Hyopotamus and Anthracotherium there are many intermediate forms, Xiphodon with two toes, Dichobune and Cainotherium, this last had forty-four teeth, forming a continuous row, and three toes on the feet. Dichodon was a genus, named by Owen from some teeth, of which it possessed the full number, and the molars formed double_crescents. From this we pass by easy transitions to the Tragulida, which have nothing to do with the Musk-deer, as is so frequently stated. They are at present confined to South Africa, South India, and the adjoining large islands. Hyomoschus, the African genus, has survived almost unchanged from the early Miocene period. Tragulas is not known fossil. An American group here comes in to fill a gap. Oreodon, an animal about the size of a sheep, found in the early Miocene, is said by Leidy to be quite intermediate between the deer and the peccaries. It had forty-four teeth, its palate more closely resembled that of the deer, and the upper molars formed, as in them, double crescents. The canon bone was not consolidated, and there were apparently four toes. They closely resemble Dichodon. Leidy divides them into three genera, Agriocharus, Merychyus, and Oreodon. The first of these approaches Choropotamus, and the crowns of the teeth were very short. Gelocus, described by Kowalevsky, is the earliest known form in which the metacarpals coalesced to form a canon bone; it occurs in the Eocene and the earlier Miocene. Those from the former have the metacarpals always free, but in the Miocene they anchylosed in the adult animal, and in higher strata they are fully coalesced. Dremotherium was a form which closely approached the deer. Cervus proper is first represented in the upper Miocene. In the earliest forms the antlers were very small and simple, closely resembling those of the Muntjac, and having long pedicles; the canines were also developed. All the Cervidæ adhere to the old type in having short crowns and well-marked necks to their molars. The Giraffes (Camelopardida) are first known from Pikermé and the Sevalik Hills; the molar teeth more closely approached those of the deer than any other animals. Heladotherium is not far removed from them; it was of large size and had no horns. Sivatherium was the largest of the extinct Artiodactylates. Its bones were bovine in character; the metacarpals and metatarsals coalesced to form a canon-bone, and there were only two toes on each foot; four horns were present, in pairs, appa

Dr. W. Kowalevsky has drawn attention to an in-rently cavicorn and yet branched.

« ПредыдущаяПродолжить »