FOSSILS FROM THE ENVIRONS OF TOKYO. /;> 



E. namadicus Falc. and Caut. Ibuncl in tlie TMcistoceue of 

 India, while Brauns determined them to belong to E. antiquus 

 Falc. found in Furope and Northern Asia. According to the 

 latter author all the Japanese elephants are to be taken as 

 Diluvial forms. According to several works relating to these 

 two species it seems to me that there do not exist sufficient 

 characters to separate the Indian form from the European and 

 North Asiatic one. Therefore it will be preferable to follow 

 Otto Koger, and to consider them as belonging to one and 

 the same species. 



INDETERMINABLE UNGULATE BONE. 



PL VI. Fig. 7. 



Only the articulating portion of a limb of an indeterminable 

 ungulate was found together with E. antiquus Falc. at Tabata. 



