5io 



FOSSIL TURTLES OF NORTH AMERICA. 



close to the midline. Seventy-five millimeters of the front border of the bone is present. 

 The greatest thickness of the hone is 12 mm., but most of it is thinner. The posterior halt ot 

 the upper surface is ornamented with a system of well-defined and rather sharp ridges which 

 inclose pits. Of these there are 3 or 4 in 10 mm. The anterior half of the surface was devoid 

 of ornamentation, but is markt by numerous grooves and perforations for blood-vessels. The 

 connection of the nuchal with the first neural and the first costal was apparently like that 

 found in T. puercensis. There remains on the posterior border of the nuchal about 20 mm. of 

 the dentated sutural edge for union with the first neural. Distad of this the border is smooth 

 for a distance of 30 mm.; so that there have evidently existed between the nuchal and the first 

 pair of costals two elongated fontanels, separated by the anterior neural. At the distal end of 

 each fontanel the border turned backward, to come into contact with the costal. What the 

 breadth antero-posteriorly of this fontanel was, we can not say, but since there appears to have 

 been only a single neural between the first pair of costals, the fontanel was probably narrow. 

 The greater part of the first costal is present, only the distal extremity being gone. The 

 average thickness is about 8 mm. The greatest fore-and-aft extent is 57 mm.; the lateral 

 extent is a little over 100 mm., the thickness, 6 mm. The bone was originally about 125 mm. 

 long. The anterior border for about 35 mm. proximally did not articulate with the nuchal, 

 but formed the posterior border of the fontanel already mentioned. Distad of this, the front 

 edge of the bone was deeply grooved for the hinder edge of the nuchal. The proximal end of 



669. 



668. 



Figs. 668 and 669. Axestemys byssina. Xj. 



668. Plastron. Xiphiplastron of type; hypoplastron from 



No. 1034 A. M. N. H. 



669. Part of nuchal and left first costal. 



the bone articulated with the first neural. The direction of the proximal border shows that 

 the anterior neural was broader at the anterior end than behind. The hinder border of the 

 costal is jagged, for sutural union with the next costal. The rib-end of the first costal plate 

 seems to have been overlapt by the outer end of the nuchal. 



This species was a large one. The free borders of the costals were beveled off very ob- 

 liquely to a sharp edge and on this beveled surface decussating bony fibers, like those of the 

 plastron, are seen in abundance. How far the free portion of the ribs extended beyond the 

 border of the carapace can not be determined, but the distance must have been considerable. 



The sculpture of the costals resembled that of the nuchal; but, in places at least, the pits 

 are larger and the ridges sharper. The walls slope away gradually toward the bottom of the 

 pits. There is little or no tendency toward the arrangement of the pits in rows. 



There appears to be sufficient reason for believing that the plastral and the carapacial 

 bones here described belonged to the same individual. 



Genus AMYDA Oken. 



present. One or more of 

 may be separated by the 



Carapace normally with H pairs of costal plates. No preneura 

 the posterior pans of costals may be in contact on the midline, or a 



neurals. Young in living forms with numerous longitudinal dorsal dermal ridges or series of 

 tubercles. 



Type: Trionyx euphraticus Daudin. 



