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ENGIS , a cave on theSee also: banks of the See also: Meuse near Liege, Belgium, where in 1832 Dr P
.
C
.
See also: Schmerling found human remains in deposits belonging to the See also: Quaternary See also: period
.
Bones of the cave-bear, See also: mammoth, See also: rhinoceros and See also: hyena were discovered in association with parts of a See also: man's See also: skeleton and a human See also: Skull
.
This, known as " the Engis Skull," gave rise to much discussion among anthropologists, since it has characteristics of both high and low development, the forehead, low and narrow, indicating slight intelligence, while the abnormally large See also: brain cavity contradicts this conclusion
.
Of it See also: Huxley wrote: " There is no mark of degradation about any See also: part of its structure
.
It is a See also: fair See also: average human skull, which might have belonged to a philosopher, or might have contained the thoughtless brains of a savage." Dr Schmerling concluded that the human remains were those of man who had been contemporary with the See also: extinct mammals
.
As, however, fragments of coarse pottery were found in the cave which See also: bore other evidence of having been used by neolithic man, by whom the cave-floor and its contents might have been disturbed and mixed, his arguments have not been regarded as conclusive
.
There is, however, no doubt as to the See also: great age of the Engis Skull
.
Discoveries of a like nature were made by Dr Schmerling in the neighbourhood in the caves of Engihoul, Chokier and others
.
See P
.
C
.
Schmerling, Recherches sur See also: les ossements decouverts clans les cavernes de la province Liege (1833); Huxley, Man's Place in Nature, p
.
156; See also: Lord Avebury, Prehistoric Times, p
.
317 (1900)
.
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