II2 FLORIDA GEOLOGICAL SURVEY-EIGHTH ANNUAL REPORT. 
chobee Wilderness, with special reference to the Geology and Zo¬ 
ology of the Floridian Peninsula. Wag. Free Inst. Sci. Trans. 
Vol. i, 134 pp., pis. 19, 1887. 
Contains an account of fossil human remains found on Little Sarasota Bay, 
and includes also the first account of the Caloosahatchee River section. 
1889. Leidy, Joseph: 
Fossil vertebrates from Florida. Proc. Acad. Nat. Sci. Phila., 
pp. 96-97, 1889. 
In this paper Leidy refers to parts of a mandible and vertebrae of a Zeuglo- 
don found imbedded in limestone at Ocala and to remains of saber-tooth tiger, 
horse and elephant found in a crevice in the limestone. He reports also on 
fossils from Peace Creek, and names the new species Glyptodon ( Chlamytlier - 
ium) septentrionalis. 
1889. Leidy, Joseph: 
Notice of some Fossil Human Bones. Wag. Free Inst. Sci. 
Trans. Vol. 2, pp. 9-12, 1889. 
The human bones described in this article were found on the shore of 
Sarasota Bay. The material was collected by Heilprin and Willcox, 1886, Will- 
cox, 1887, and previously by Judge Webb. The human bones, although changed to 
liinonite, derived evidently from the ferruginous sandstone in which they are 
imbedded, are nevertheless believed to be recent. The associated invertebrates 
are all of living species. 
In this paper, page 12, is noted the discovery by Mr. Willcox of a horn-core 
and a radius of Bison latifrons, found on Rocky Creek, thirty miles north of 
Sarasota Bay. This reference to the occurrence of Bison latifrons is evidently a 
mistake, as Mr. Willcox states that the only Bison latifrons collected by him 
was taken from Stump Pass near Grove City. 
1889. Leidy, Joseph: 
Description of Mammalian Remains from a Rock Crevice in 
Florida. Wag. Free Inst. Sci. Trans. Vol. 2, pp. 13-17, 1889. 
The fossils described in this paper were obtained by Mr. Joseph Willcox at 
Ocala, Florida, in 1888. They were taken from a crevice in the rock exposed 
in quarrying limestone on the property of F. M. Phillips. The limestone re¬ 
ferred to is the Ocala formation. The fossils found in the crevice of the rock, 
however, are of much later date, being probably Pleistocene. The fossils found 
here include the following: (1) Saber-tooth tiger, described as Machairodus 
floridanus sp. nov,; (2) Equus fratcrnus Leidy. The remains of the llama 
consisted of a single inferior molar tooth believed to pertain to the smallest of 
the three species previously described from the vicinity of Archer. These three 
