[664] Loc. cit., p. 50.
[665] It is very important to note that this individual rearing is, in all probability, deeply connected with the aboriginal mode of life; viz. their scattered manner of living in small groups and their roaming habits. Both these latter seem to be, on the other hand, dependent upon the economic conditions of the stage of primitive hunting and fishing, and it may be assumed that all lower races have passed through, broadly speaking, the same circumstances of life; it is, therefore, probable that the fact of common nursing can never have taken place in very low societies. I do not think, consequently, that Dr. Rivers's hypothesis, basing group motherhood on communism in suckling and rearing, can be accepted even in its general form.
[666] Howitt, Kam. and Kurn., p. 189.
[667] Howitt, Nat. Tr., p. 766.
[668] Recollections, p. 278.
[669] Curr, A.R., i. p. 76.
[670] A similar statement is given by Spencer and Gillen, Nat. Tr., p. 51.
[671] Recollections, p. 252.
[672] A.R., i. p. 71.
[673] Loc. cit., p. 75.