[3] S. Reinach proves clearly enough that the collections of the Emperor Augustus were from Capri.
[4] This skeleton was discovered in 1726 by Scheuchzer, a doctor of Œningen, and by him placed in the Leyden Museum, with the pompous inscription Homo diluvii testis (Philosophical Transactions, vol. xxxiv.). Cuvier, by scraping away the stone, revealed the true nature of the fossil.
[5] “Ossium Fossilium Docimasia.”
[6] “Mém. Acad. des Inscriptions,” 1734, vol. x., p. 163.
[7] Archæologia, vol. ii., p. 118.
[8] “The Antiquities of Warwickshire,” vol. iv., 1656.
[9] Archæologia, vol. xiii., p. 105.
[10] Castelfranco: Revue d’Anthropologie, 1887.
[11] Annales des Sciences Naturelles, vol. xvii., p. 607. Cartailhac: Matériaux, 1884.
[12] “Recherches sur les Ossements Fossiles de la Province de Liège.”