The second link is supplied by the famous Neanderthal skull found in the valley of the Neander, near Düsseldorf, in 1856. The discovery of this skull, with its receding forehead and prominent ridges above the orbits of the eyes, and its small cranial capacity, created a sensation, for it was soon seen that it was intermediate between the skulls of the lowest human races and those of the anthropoid apes. Virchow declared that if the skull was pre-human its structural characteristics were abnormal. This conclusion, however, was rendered untenable by the discovery in 1886 of similar skulls and the skeletons of two persons, in a cave near Spy in Belgium. The "Spy man" and the "Neanderthal man" belong to the same type and are estimated to have been living in the middle of the palæolithic age.
Fig. 111.—Profile Reconstructions of the Skulls of Living and Fossil Men: 1. Brachycephalic European; 2. The more ancient of the Nebraska skulls; 3. The Neanderthal man; 4. One of the Spy skulls; 5. Skull of the Java man. (Altered from Schwalbe and Osborn.)
The third link is in the early Neolithic man of Engis.
And now to this interesting series of gradations has been added another by the discovery in 1906 of a supposed primitive race of men in Nebraska. The two skulls unearthed in Douglass County in that State indicate a cranial capacity falling below that of the "Australian negro, the lowest existing type of mankind known at present."
Fig. 111 shows in outline profile reconstructions of the skulls of some of the fossil types as compared with the short-headed type of Europe.
Palæontological discoveries are thus coming to support the evidences of man's evolution derived from embryology and archæology. While we must admit that the geological evidences are at present fragmentary, there is, nevertheless, reasonable ground for the expectation that they will be extended by more systematic explorations of caverns and deposits of the quarternary and late tertiary periods.
Mental Evolution.—Already the horizon is being widened, and new problems in human evolution have been opened. The evidences in reference to the evolution of the human body are so compelling as to be already generally accepted, and we have now the question of evolution of mentality to deal with. The progressive intelligence of animals is shown to depend upon the structure of the brain and the nervous system, and there exists such a finely graded series in this respect that there is strong evidence of the derivation of human faculties from brute faculties.