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A Further Review of Recent Advances in Palethnology
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 25 October 2013
Extract
In continuation of my former review of advances made in recent years in the science of palethnology, it seems to me that, in view of the rapidity with which our knowledge of this subject has increased during the last eighteen months or so, it will be opportune and acceptable to once more put before prehistorians a summary of this newly-acquired knowledge, and to point out the great interest and importance of the discoveries which have made that knowledge possible.
I must confess to a certain amount of satisfaction in recognising that some of the forecasts of future, discoveries which I foreshadowed in my former article have in some measure been fulfilled, while some of the lines of research which I suggested might be followed up have been investigated and are in process of partial solution. One of the most important of these, the investigation into the causes and meaning of the “patination” of flint, was worked at by the late Dr. Canton, of Ipswich, who carried through a series of highly interesting experiments in which flints were subjected to the action of various solvents, and it is my hope that some account of this work will be laid before the scientific world in the near future.
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- Copyright © The Prehistoric Society 1914
References
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