[1097] Ewart, Trans. Highland and Agric. Soc. of Scotland, 5th Ser., XVI. 1904, pp. 230-68. A. C. Haddon, Nat. Home-Reading Union Mag. (Gen. Course), XV. p. 114.
[1098] T. Rice Holmes, Anc. Brit. and the Invas. of Jul. Caes., 1907, p. 56 n.
[1099] Herodotus, History, l. vii., c. 15.
[1100] G. Rawlinson, translation of Hist. of Herodotus, 4th edition, 1880, IV. p. 72 n. Ridgeway, op. cit. pp. 23, 117, 130, 192, gives particulars of the use of the lasso by other peoples.
[1101] A. Doigneau, Nos Ancêtres Primitifs, 1905, pp. 129-30.
[1102] Ibid. pp. 129-30.
[1103] Guide to Stone Age, pp. 39-40. S. Baring-Gould, Deserts of Southern France, 1894, I. p. 151. Ridgeway, op. cit. pp. 83-4.
[1104] Baring-Gould, loc. cit. The exploration of the Kesserloch cavern, at Thaingen, Baden, showed that the horse had been used for food in the Magdalenian period. See Nature, LXXIX. 1909, p. 343.
[1105] N. Joly, Man before Metals, 4th edition, 1887, p. 265 and note.
[1106] Ewart, Trans. Highland and Agric. Soc. of Scotland, 5th Ser., XVI. pp. 237-42. For a contrary English view, see Ridgeway, op. cit. pp. 89-91.