MAMMOTH CAVE, a cavern near Green river, Edmonson co., Ky., about 85 miles S. S. W. of Louisville. The cave is about 10 miles long, but it requires up ward of 150 miles of traveling to explore its multitudinous avenues, chambers, grottoes, rivers, and cataracts. The main cave is 4 miles long, from 40 to 300 feet wide, and rises in height to 125 feet. The most interesting features of the cave are: The Chief City or Temple, covering an area of about four acres, and having a dome of solid rock 120 feet high; the Star Chamber, about 500 feet long by 70 feet wide, with a ceiling 70 feet high, consisting of black gypsum dotted with many white points which, when the cham ber is lighted, have all the appearance of stars; Silliman's avenue, miles long, 20 to 200 feet wide, and 20 to 40 feet high; Cleveland's Cabinet, an arch 50 feet wide, 10 feet high, and 2 miles long, covered with a variety of forma tions in all sorts of shapes and of many colors; the Maelstrom Abyss and Bottom less Pit, each of which is 20 feet wide and about 175 feet deep, and the river Styx, 450 feet long and crossed by a natural bridge about 30 feet high. The cave contains various kinds of animals, and there are also found lizards, crickets, frogs, bats, and different sorts of fish. The latter include the famous eyeless fish, which are white in color. The Mam moth Cave is supposed to have been dis covered in 1809. The atmosphere is pure and healthful and there is a temperature throughout the year of about 59°. It is visited annually by ninny sightseers.
MAN, a collective term for the human species. Since the middle of the 19th century there has been a growing ten dency to refer all the sciences relating to man to one comprehensive science, Anthropology. Darwin is of the opin ion that man sprung from one of the naked mollusks called Ascidians, the line of descent or ascent running through some humble fish, like the lancelot, then up through the ganoids and other fish, the amphibians, reptiles and birds, the Monotremata, the lowest Mammals, the Marsupialia, the Placental Mammalia, the Lemurs, the Simiadx, and the an thropoid apes.
Blumenbach divided mankind into five races, the Caucasian, the Mongolian, the Ethiopian, the American, and the Malay. Cuvier reduced the five to three, the Cau casian, the Mongolian, and the Ethio pian. Pritchard extended them to seven, the Iranian (the same as the Caucasian), the Turanian (the same as the Mongo lian), the Native Americans, the Hotten tots, the Negroes, the Papuas or Woolly headed Polynesians, the Alfuro and Na tive Australians. Latham divides man
kind into three varieties, Mongolidx, At lantidw, and Japetidm. Huxley's classifi cation of mankind is into the Australoid, Negroid, Mongoloid, Xanthochroic, and Melanchroic races.
Tools distinguish man from other ani mals, and so where tools are found in geological strata and debris it is known that man must have been. The earliest tools were flaked stones and cracked bones. All flaked stones and cracked bones, however, may not be tools. Some of the flaked stones, for example, may have been produced by action of fire. Man is the only animal which uses fire, of course, but then fire may exist without the agency of man. Lightning, volcanic action, spontaneous combustion, and burning wells and springs may produce conflagrations, and therefore produce flaked flint stones. The earliest deposits in which stone tools and weapons clearly shaped by man are known to have been found are the gravel beds in the valleys of the Thames in England, the Somme in France, the Manzares in Spain, and in other portions of western Europe. These tools and hunting weapons are found alongside of tropical fauna, like the lion, elephant, hippopotamus, and large apes.
It is known, therefore, that man lived in Europe during a period when that country had a tropical climate. But geo logical deposits on top of the remains of tropical animals and man's tools contain the remains of arctic animals, like the musk ox, reindeer, and white fox. Man, therefore, hunted the tropical lion and elephant in England, and France before he hunted the arctic reindeer and white fox. The question, therefore, to be determined is, How long ago was the ice age? From all evidence it has been agreed that from 10,000 to 12,000 years have elapsed since the departure of the glacial mass from the now thickly set tled portions of Europe and the N. part of the United States. The period of for mation of the glacial mass and duration of the ice age is placed by the investiga tors at from 20,000 to 30,000 years. Al lowing additional time for the primeval man in the tropical period to develop and spread over the area under consider ation, the total of 50,000 years is arrived at as the approximate time which has elapsed since the earliest authentic traces of man on the earth.