Mortillet divides the prehistoricperiod, as a whole, into four epochs.
2
In that prehistoricperiod I was reckoned quite a beau:
3
Stone implements continued to be made during the greater part of the prehistoricperiod.
4
The art of casting small, solid bronze images goes far back into the prehistoricperiod in Greece.
5
This gives, for the prehistoricperiod proper, a term of about two hundred and twenty-two thousand years.
6
For the very first chapters of the story we must go back in imagination to the prehistoricperiod.
7
Over the "land bridge," Siberia to Alaska, some people came as far back as the prehistoricperiod.
8
In the vicinity are also valuable iron mines, which were opened early in the prehistoricperiod, and which are still worked.
9
The uncounted centuries before the dawn of history make up the prehistoricperiod, when savagery and barbarism prevailed throughout the world.
10
Our observation of historical man in antiquity makes it somewhat doubtful whether this conception had been attained before the close of the prehistoricperiod.
11
After this in some sort prehistoricperiod had been rapidly run through, he would have to follow very closely the development of electric telegraphy.
12
Perhaps the Titans that played such famous parts in the prehistoricperiod of our Earth, were adventurers like ourselves, casually arrived from some great planet!
13
For the first time since that prehistoricperiod when she was "Miss Deane" and he "Mr. Jenks" she remembered the manner of her garments.
14
Rice is the staple food of the common people, and has been raised from prehistoricperiods.
15
But I do not hesitate to call this PrehistoricPeriod historical in the best sense of the word.
16
Here is a table detailing Europe's main prehistoricperiods, as commonly accepted by archaeologists, with the oldest at the top.