36
L’Anthropologie, xiv. pp. 416-426.
37
Munro, p. 196.
38
Munro, 147, 148.
39
Munro, p. 218.
40
Munro, pp. 219-220.
41
Munro, p. 219.
42
Transactions, ut supra, p. 51.
43
Proc. Soc. Ant. 1900-1901, pp. 112-148.
44
Pp. 135, 177, 257-258, and elsewhere.
45
Munro, pp. 177, 257, 258.
46
Munro, p. 139.
47
Munro, p. 264.
48
These phrases are from Munro, Arch. and False Antiquities, pp. 138-139.
49
Munro, p. 139.
50
Munro, Prehistoric Scotland, p. 420.
51
Munro, p. 130.
52
See page 246 of Dr. Munro’s article on Raised Beaches, Proc. Roy. Soc. Edinburgh, vol. xxv. part 3. The reference is to two Clyde canoes built of planks fastened to ribs, suggesting that the builder had seen a foreign galley, and imitated it.
53
Munro, pp. 138, 139.
54
Proceedings Scot. Soc. Ant. vol. xxxiv. p. 462.
55
Munro, p. 147.
56
Proc. Soc. Ant. Scot. 1900-1901, p. 296.
57
Munro, p. 138.
58
These structures, of course, were of dry stone, without lime and mortar. By what name we call them, “towers,” or “cairns,” is indifferent to me.
59
Beda, book 1, chap. i.
60
Proceedings Soc. Scot. Ant. 1899-1900, vol. xxxiv. pp. 456-458.