[1317] Caesar, De Bell. Gall., l. VI. c. 28. The value of this passage is seriously questioned by Professor J. Wilson, in Evolution of British Cattle, 1909, Ch. I.
[1318] Naturalist, 1908, p. 330. Chambers’s Cyclopaedia, Art. “Cattle.” Lord Avebury, Pre-hist. Times, 6th edition, 1900, p. 286, says that the urus survived in Germany until the sixteenth century.
[1319] Lord Avebury, l.c.
[1320] Naturalist, 1908, p. 361.
[1321] W. Boyd Dawkins, Early Man in Britain, 1880, p. 261.
[1322] R. Hedger Wallace, “White Cattle,” in Trans. Nat. Hist. Soc. Glasgow, v., N.S. Pt 2 (1897-8), pp. 220-273. Mr Wallace gives twenty-one pages of bibliography. This excellent paper may be referred to on many points. J. Wilson, Evol. of Brit. Cattle, especially pp. 22-3, 38-40, 61-9, and the whole of Chap. iii. See also R. Lydekker, in Knowledge, XXV. pp. 101-2; H. Woodward, Guide to Fossil Mammals and Birds (S. Kensington), 8th edition, 1904, pp. 43-4. An article on Park Cattle appeared in Nature Notes, IX. 1898, pp. 46-9.
[1323] Chambers’s Cyclopaedia, Art. “Cattle.” Cf. J. Wilson, Evol. of Brit. Cattle, p. 17. (The view taken is in harmony with that of Professor T. McKenny Hughes.)
[1324] H. A. Nicholson, Manual of Palaeontology, 3rd edition, 1889, II. p. 1352.
[1325] Ibid., 3rd edition, 1889, II. p. 1352.
[1326] H. A. Nicholson, Manual of Palaeontology, 3rd edition, 1889, II. p. 1352. Naturalist 1908, p. 332.