DIK0RNITHrDJ3. 313 



represented in fi g. 1 of the plates cited (without reversal) 

 in connection with the premaxillte No. A. 189 and the 

 ahove-mentioned calvarium of Anomalopteryx. The spe- 

 cimen is considerably larger than the mandible of Xo. 

 A. 188. Walter Mantell Collection. 



32312. A smaller imperfect mandible ; from the South Island. 

 Shows the symphysis, and the greater part of the left 

 ramus. Walter Mantell Collection. 



A. 190. The greater portion of the left ramus of the mandible, 

 wanting the symphysis ; from the South Island. This 

 specimen is slightly larger than the mandible of the skull 

 of the skeleton No. A. 9o of E. yravijjes. 



Walter ManteU Collection. 



A. 190 a. The imperfect dentary portion of a nearly similar man- 

 dible ; from the South Island. Walter Mantell Collection. 



32199. The two rami of a mandible, the left imperfect ; from the 

 {Fig.) South Island. Described and figured by Owen in the 

 ' Trans, Zool, Soc' vol. vii. p. 132, pi. xii. fig. 7, and also 

 in the ' Extinct Birds of New Zealand,' p. 271, pi. Isxv. 

 fig. 7, as Dinornis rheides; both figures being reversed. 

 The depth of the ramus and its sharp deflection clearly 

 show that the specimen belongs to the present genus. 



Walter Mantell Collection. 



A. 194. A. left quadrate ; from the South Island. In its compa- 

 ratively long anterior process this specimen resembles the 

 quadrate of No. 32211 (p. 311). 



Walter Mantell Collection. 



EmeuS) sp. a. 



The undermentioned skull differs from all those referred to 

 E. cmssus and E. gravipes by its extreme width and sharpness, 

 and thus appears to indicate a third species of the genus. 



Hab. South Island. 



A. 187. The skull ; from the Shuy river, Otago, South Island. The 

 {Fig.) palatal aspect of the cranium is described and figured by 

 Owen in the 'Trans. Zool. Soc' vol. x. p. 182,pl.xxxi.fig. 1, 

 and also in his ' Extinct Birds of New Zealand,' pi. cxiv. 

 fig. 1, where it is referred to E. {Dinornis) crassus. The 

 mandible is figured in woodcut 55, C (p. 220). This speci- 

 men, with the exception of some damage to the frontal 



