Page:Early Man in Britain and His Place in the Tertiary Period.djvu/267

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CHAP. VII.]
RELATION TO THE ESKIMOS.
239

also be remarked that all those found in the caverns are considerably the worse for wear. The gloves, also, of the Cave-men (Fig. 75) are similar to those now used by the Eskimos.[1]

Fig. 93.—Eskimo Hunting Scene.

The most astonishing bond of union between the Cave-men and the Eskimos is the art of representing animals. Just as the former engraved bisons, horses, mammoths, and other creatures familiar to them, so do the latter represent the animals upon which they depend for food. On the implements of the one you see the hunting of the urus and the horse, depicted in the same way as the killing of the reindeer or walrus on the implements of the other (Fig. 93). Reindeer and seals are represented in the same manner by both. The identity of the style is so extraordinary, that had the

Fig. 94.—Portion of Implement, Laugerie Haute, 1/1.

head of the arrow-straightener (Fig. 94) from Laugerie

  1. The gloves of the Eskimos in the British Museum present considerable