[204] See p. 398, infra.
[205] Vict. Hist. of ... Somerset, i, 178.
[206] See pp. 382, 389, n. 6, infra.
[207] See p. 389, infra. M. L. Siret (L’Anthr., xvii, 1906, p. 127) says the same for Spain.
[208] See pp. 385-90, infra. ‘The ... transition,’ says Mr. Clement Reid (Origin of the Brit. Flora, p. 45), ‘from the Palaeolithic to the Neolithic is, unfortunately, one of the most obscure, and I can only suggest that the break is more apparent than real, and that one follows the other in close succession.’ See also p. 93 of the same book.
[209] See Mr. Clement Reid’s chapter in Vict. Hist. of ... Hants, i, 35-6.
[210] See A. J. Jukes-Browne, The Building of the Brit. Isles, p. 300. Mr. Clement Reid (Origin of the Brit. Flora, p. 46) states that in the early part of the Neolithic Age ‘the land stood ... some 60 or 70 feet above its present level’. Cf. p. 20, supra.
[211] Journ. Ethn. Soc., N. S., ii, 1870, pp. 141-5; J. Prestwich, Geology, ii, 523-4; A. J. Jukes-Browne, The Building of the Brit. Isles, pp. 300-2; Clement Reid, Origin of the Brit. Flora, p. 46.
[212] Nature, Jan. 6, 1898, p. 235; Archaeol. Journal, lv, 1898, p. 271.
[213] Ib., p. 272.