Their cheek teeth were more plicated in structure than ours, more plicated and not less so; they had not the long fangs of our cheek teeth; and also the quasi-men had not the marked es (dog teeth) of an ordinary human being.
The capacity of their skulls was quite human, but the brain was bigger behind and lower in front than the human brain.
Their intellectual faculties were differently arranged.
They were not aral to the human line.
Mentally and physically they were upon a different line from the human line.
Skulls and bones of this extinbsp;species of man were found at Neahal among other places, and from that plabsp;the strange proto-men have been christened Neahal Men, or Neahalers.
They must have endured in Europe for many hundreds or even thousands of years.
At that time the climate and geography of our world was very different from what they are at the prent time.
Europe for example was covered with ibsp; reag as far south as the Thames and into tral Germany and Russia; there was no el parating Britain from Franbsp;the Mediterranean and the Red Sea were great valleys, with perhaps a of lakes in their deeper portions, and a great inland a spread from the prent Blabsp;Sea across South Russia and far into tral Asia.
Their cheek teeth were more plicated in structure than ours, more plicated and not less so; they had not the long fangs of our cheek teeth; and also the quasi-men had not the marked es (dog teeth) of an ordinary human being.
The capacity of their skulls was quite human, but the brain was bigger behind and lower in front than the human brain.
Their intellectual faculties were differently arranged.
They were not aral to the human line.
Mentally and physically they were upon a different line from the human line.
Skulls and bones of this extinbsp;species of man were found at Neahal among other places, and from that plabsp;the strange proto-men have been christened Neahal Men, or Neahalers.
They must have endured in Europe for many hundreds or even thousands of years.
At that time the climate and geography of our world was very different from what they are at the prent time.
Europe for example was covered with ibsp; reag as far south as the Thames and into tral Germany and Russia; there was no el parating Britain from Franbsp;the Mediterranean and the Red Sea were great valleys, with perhaps a of lakes in their deeper portions, and a great inland a spread from the prent Blabsp;Sea across South Russia and far into tral Asia.