You  like to draw: but why you like it neither you nor any man can tell. It  is one of the mysteries of human nature; and that poor savage clothed in  skins, dirty it may be, and more ignorant than you (happily) can  conceive, when he sat in the cave scratching on ivory the figures of the  animals he hunted, was proving thereby that he had the same wonderful  and mysterious human nature as you; that he was the kinsman of every  painter and sculptor who ever felt it a delight and duty to copy the  beautiful works of God.
Madame How & Lady Why
See the Study Guide by Katie Barr at Ambleside Online for helpful commentary on this chapter. Old earth references will be found on some of the sites below.
Pg. 106-107: French cave paintings and rock archive - lots of photos.
The map below is in a pdf format here and may be printed.
Pg 107: The Lena River where Woolly Rhino carcasses were found. No commentary, just beautiful scenery:
Historical references to the Woolly Rhino
Scholarly article with some interesting information on the Woolly Rhino find in Siberia if you'd like to delve into this a bit more.
 Extract from Ice age fauna of northern Spain - Mauricio Antón.jpg.
Pg. 109: The Irish elk - not actually Irish nor elk but a gigantic deer, Megaloceros giganteus. See here and here.
Pg 108 - The Ice Age
Pg 114: Middens - what they are & what they tell us.
Middens provide an insight into earlier  occupation of sites. This one, at the NW edge of Traigh na Beirigh, Great Britain, indicates shellfish in the diet.
Pg 116 - Kingsley talks about 'Neanderthal man' in a very derogatary fashion - that he was 'like an ape' & 'would have eaten you if he could.' This article shows how the view of Neanderthal man has changed in recent times.
Over the past several years, the scientific community has witnessed (not  always to its liking, I might add) a serious “redefining” of the  Neanderthal people. Some anthropologists of the past depicted them as  culturally stagnant, if not outright stupid, individuals. In 1996,  however, researchers were forced to reevaluate their long-held views on  Neanderthals...
I found this video of the Lacaux caves which were discovered in France in 1940, well after Kingsley's time - but it's in French! However, it doesn't look too difficult & I'm going to go through it with Moozle and see how she goes translating it, or the gist of it at least.
Update: Chauvet Cave, France - in English! Thanks to Zoe for the suggestion.




7 comments:
Thank you for these posts about MHLW! I will use them plus the guide this coming fall with my son in year 4. A big thank you! :)
This fall meaning here in the USA ;)
Thanks Karla, I appreciate the feedback. :)
We recently watched a documentary about those cave paintings - it was in English - called Cave of Forgotten Dreams there is an excerpt on youtube here https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=_xDcdVWnOiE if your interested.
Thanks so much Zoe! We watched it this morning & I'll add it to the post above.
Fascinating topic! Thanks for sharing the resources.
Fascinating topic! Thanks for sharing the resources.
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