“Les Sculptures de Rochers de la Suède,” read at the Prehistoric Congress, Stockholm, 1874; and see G. Coffey, op. cit. p. 60.
“Dolmens of Ireland,” pp. 701-704.
“The Religion of Babylonia and Assyria.”
A good example from Amaravati (after Fergusson) is given by Bertrand, “Rel. des G.,” p. 389.
Sergi, “The Mediterranean Race,” p. 313.
At Lökeberget, Bohuslän; see Monteiius, op. cit.
See Lord Kingsborough's “Antiquities of Mexico,” passim, and the Humboldt fragment of Mexican painting (reproduced in Churchward's “Signs and Symbols of Primordial Man”).
See Sergi, op. cit. p. 290, for the Ankh on a French dolmen.
“Bulletin de la Soc. d'Anthropologie,” Paris, April 1893.
“The Welsh People,” pp. 616-664, where the subject is fully discussed in an appendix by Professor J. Morris Jones. “The pre-Aryan idioms which still live in Welsh and Irish were derived from a language allied to Egyptian and the Berber tongues.”