or; Primitive Culture, vol. i. p. 101.
[536:2] Ibid. p. 291.
[536:3] Ibid.
[536:4] Ibid. p. 234.
[536:5] Ibid. p. 240 and 243.
[536:6] Early Hist. Mankind, pp. 357 and 361.
[536:7] Ibid. p. 361.
The legend of the "Elixir of Life" of the Western World, was well-known
in _China_. (Buckley: Cities of the Ancient World, p. 167.)
[536:8] Ibid. p. 118, and Squire's Serpent Symbol.
[537:1] Fusang, p. 56.
[537:2] Ibid. p. 55.
[537:3] Mexican Antiquities, vol. vi. p. 181.
[537:4] Ibid., and Squire's Serpent Symbol.
[537:5] Mexican Antiq., vol. vi. p. 180.
[537:6] Early Hist. Mankind, p. 311.
[537:7] The traveler, James Orton, found fossil bones of an extinct
species of the horse, the mastodon, and other animals, near Punin, in
South America, all of which had passed away before the arrival of the
human species. This native American horse was succeeded, in after ages,
by the countless herds descended from a few introduced with the Spanish
colonists. (See the Andes and the Amazon, pp. 154, 155.)
[537:8] Serpent Symbol, p. 47.
[538:1] Serpent Symbol, p. 193.
[538:2] The Andes and the Amazon, p. 454.
[538:3] Eastern Monachism, p. 222.
[538:4] Serpent Symbol, p. 43.
[538:5] See Ibid.
[538:6] Travels in Persia, vol. ii. p. 284.
[538:7] New Spain, vol. i. p. 136.
[538:8] Ibid. p. 141.
[539:1] New Spain, vol. i. p. 153.
[539:2] Types of Mankind, p. 275.
[539:3] The Andes and the Amazon, p. 170.
[540:1] Paschel: Races of Man, pp. 402-404.
[540:2] Fusang, p. 7.
[540:3] Ibid. 118.
[540:4] Quoted in Ibid.
[540:5] Quoted In Ibid. p. 94.
[541:1] Paschel: Races of Man, pp. 400, 401.
[541:2] To those who may think that the Old World might have been
peopled from the new, we refer to Oscar Paschel's "Races of Man," p. 32.
The author, in speaking on this subject, says: "There at one time
existed a great continent, to which belonged Madagascar and perhaps
portions of Eastern Africa, the Maldives and Laccadives, and also the
Island of Ceylon, which was never attached to India, perhaps even the
island of Celebes in the far East, which possesses a perplexing fauna,
with semi-African features." On this continent, which was situated in
the now Indian Ocean, must we look for the _cradle of humanity_.
[541:3] Paschal: Races of Man, p. 31.
[541:4] Darwin's Journal, p. 213.
[542:1] Darwin's Journal, p. 213.
[542:2] Ibid. pp. 220, 221.
[542:3] This is seen from the f
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