1. UALJEXA. 85 



Europe, except at Copenhagen. The singular effect produced by the 

 enormous size of the head, as compared with the remainder of the 

 skeleton, must be seen to be fully realized. 



" The cranium is 18' iJ" long in a straight line, the vertebral column 

 31' 6", making a total of 50' '6". The epiphyses of the arm-bones 

 are united at both ends, as are those of all the caudal vertebrae, but 

 not those of the lumbar and dorsal vertebrae ; so that the animal was 

 in a late period of the adolescent stage. The vertebral formula is 

 C. 7, D. 14, L. 10, C. 2;i=54. The tail is quite complete. This 

 is the normal total number, according to Eschricht and Ueinhardt ; 

 but an individual peculiarity consists in the development of an addi- 

 tional rudimentary rib on the left side, about 18 " long, and articulating 

 ■with the transverse process of the fourteenth vertebra behind the 

 neck. This vertebra is therefore reckoned among the dorsal instead 

 of the lumbar series. The ordinary number of dorsal vertebras and 

 pairs of ribs is thirteen. The last two lumbar and first three caudal 

 vertebrae are enveloped in an immense mass of exostosed bone. The 

 skeleton appears quite perfect ; even the pelvic bones are present, 

 though not yet articulated. There are two bones on each side, dif- 

 fering considerably in the details of their conformation from the same 

 bones in the skeleton which has been lately received, though not yet 

 mounted, at the Museum of the Royal College of Surgeons." — Flotver, 

 F. Z. /S'. 18(34, 41 G. 



" There is a skull of a very young individual in the Leydcn Museum, 

 in not very perfect condition. It is 5' 2" in length, and 2' 10|" in 

 greatest breadth across the squamosals. The elements of the occipital 

 bones are distinct ; but the parietal is already anchylosed with the 

 supraoccipital along the upper margin of the temporal fossa. The 

 basispbenoid is distinct from both the presphenoid and basioccipital, 

 though the union with the latter is the more advanced of the two. 

 At this stage the skull differs much from that of the adult animal. 

 Besides the proportionately greater size of the cranial ca^dty, the 

 orbital processes of the frontals are shorter, and broader at their 

 extremity, the maxillaries are less arched, and the skidl generally 

 much more depressed." — FJower, P. Z. S. 1864, 394. 



The car-bones, with the tympanic in situ, are represented by 

 Eschricht (Xord. Hvaler, t. 5. f. 4). The tympanic bone is sub- 

 rhombic ; the upper surface flat, with a large, subangidar, rugose 

 prominence occui)ying about two-thirds of the upper inner side ; the 

 upper margin rounded, the outer edge rather sharp and slightly 

 arched ; the lower edge flat, truncated, with a sharp ujiper and lower 

 edge, which is angulated at the lower outer corner. There is a deep 

 groove between the inner dorsal prominence and the lower edge. 

 The lower surface convex, Asith a largo oblong opening of nearly 

 equal width the whole length. 



The specimen of the ear-bones in the British Museum is rather 

 sea-worn and polished ; but I have compared it, through the kindness 

 of ifr. W. H. Flower, with the car-bone of the skeleton which the 

 Koyal College of Surgeons has just received from Greenland. 



in the British Museum there is a pair of car-bones, which evi- 



