I58 FLORIDA GEOLOGICAL SURVEY-EIGHTH ANNUAL REPORT. 
LIST OF MAMMALS FROM STRATUM NO. 2. 
In the following list those species that have been found in place 
in stratum No. 2 are indicated by the use of the dagger. The re¬ 
maining species although not found, in place are referred to this 
horizon as their probable source. Of these mammals the first four¬ 
teen have been previously listed as having been found in direct as¬ 
sociation with the human skeletal remains. 
Didelphis virginiana.t 
Megalonyx jeffersonii.t 
Chlamytherium septentrionalis.t 
Dasypus sp. ?t 
Equus leidyi.t 
Tapirus haysiiPt 
Odocoileus sp.t 
Mammut americanum.t 
Elephas columbi.t 
Neofiber alleni.t 
Sylvilagus sp.t 
Sigmodon sp.t 
Cryptotis floridana.t 
Blarina sp.t 
Vulpes pennsylvanicus ?t 
Equus complicatus.t 
Peccary indt.t 
Smilodon sp.t 
Canis ayersi, sp. nov.t 
Procyon lotorPt 
Equus litoralis. 
Cameloid indt.t 
Bison sp. , 
Hydrochoerus sp. 
Lutra canadensis. 
LIST OF MAMMALS FROM STRATUM NO. 3. 
In the writer's original list of species from Vero reference was 
made to a rabbit from stratum No. 3 of the section, representing a 
new genus, the generic characters being found in the structure of 
the first lower molariform tooth. Specimens of this rabbit subse¬ 
quently obtained indicate that the seemingly unusual structure of 
this tooth in the jaw first obtained is due to imperfect preservation 
and that the rabbit is to be referred to the normal Leporidae, prob¬ 
ably to the genus Sylvilagus as defined by Nelson.* The species 
ag'rees rather closely with the modern Sylvilagus ( Limnolagus ) 
pahistris, although the re-entrant folds of enamel on the front of 
the first lower molariform tooth are seemingly less distinctly cren- 
ulated than are those of the modern species. 
Didelpbis virginiana. 
Chlamytherium septentrionalis. 
Dasypus sp. ? 
Odocoileus osceola. 
Neofiber alleni. 
Sylvilagus sp. 
Sigmodon sp. 
Neotoma sp. 
Scalopus sp. 
Vulpes pennsylvanicus? 
Canis sp. cf. C. latrans. 
Procyon lotor? 
Lutra canadensis. 
Lynx sp. 
Ursus indt. 
*The Rabbits of North America by E. W. Nelson, North American Fauna 
No. 29. U. S. Department of Agriculture, Bureau of Biological Survey, 1909. 
