Hide
hide
Hide

Name Index

To

On the Occurrence of Human Remains in a Bone Cave at Cattedown

Trans. Devon. Assoc. Vol. XIX, (1887) illus., plan, map. pp. 419-437.

by

R.N. Worth, FGS

Prepared by Michael Steer

The paper was presented at the Association’s July 1887 Plympton meeting. Plymouth has a remarkable history of bone-cave discoveries since the early 19th Century, when excavation at the Admiralty Breakwater Quarries at Oreston first breached caves filled with fossil bones. The climax of these occasional encounters with the City's buried fossil heritage came with the breaching of a fissure at Cattedown in Autumn 1886, wherein were eventually discovered the remains of at least 15 hominins. These were subsequently excavated and researched by the author and others. Owing to both the geographical location of the discoveries, in a European context, and to the quantitative and qualitative nature and physical disposition of the human remains, this was one of the most important discoveries ever documented about the history of "anatomically-modern humans" or Homo sapiens in Europe. The article, from a copy of a rare and much sought-after journal can be downloaded from the Internet Archive. Google has sponsored the digitisation of books from several libraries. These books, on which copyright has expired, are available for free educational and research use, both as individual books and as full collections to aid researchers.

 

 Page
Alger, Mr. William Henry419-20
Burnard, Lack & Alger, Messrs.419, 431
Burnard, Mr. Robert419-20, 422, 424, 431
Busk, Professor George432
Davies, Mr.431
Dawkins, Mr. Boyd432
Hill, Messrs.419
Hill, Mr. F.428
Inglis, Mr. J.C.420
Jackson, Mr. G.431
Lack, Mr. John Williams419-20
Meisenbach, Georg434
Owen, Professor435
Roy, Mr.431
Smith, Colonel Hamilton419
Tweedy, Mr.431, 434
Worth, Mr. R.H.427