270 BELPHINID.t;. 



4. Lagenorhynchus acutus. Esclinclifs Dolphin. 



Body ? 



Teeth |-f^ ; uose of skull half its length, and nearly twice as long 

 as wide at the notch ; lower jaw obliquely truncated in front. 



Phocfena acutus, Gray, in Broohes's Cat. Mus. 39, 1828. 



Delphinus (Crrampus) acutus, Gray, Spic. Zool. 2, 1828 (from a skull) ; 



Fischer, Syn. 3Iamm. 656. 

 Delplimus leucopleurus, var., Nilsson, Skand. Fauna, i. 598. 

 Lagenorhyuclius acutus, Gray, Zool. F. ^ T. 3Q; Cat. Cetac. B. M. 



1850, 101 ; P. Z. S. 1864, 2.39. 

 Delphiuus (LageuorhjTichus) Eschriclitii, Van Beneden, Nouv. Mem. 



Acad. R. Brux. xxxii. 31. 

 Delphinus Eschrichtii, Schlegel, Abhandl. 122. 1. 1, t. 2. f. 4, t. 4. f. 5 ; 



M. Chmsen, Dissert, de Lage)iorhyncMs, 4:to, Kilice, 1853 ; Fschricht, 



Compt. Rend. Acad. Sci. 1852, 12th July. 



Inhab. North Sea, Faroe Islands {Eschrkht). 



Skulls and skeleton in the Leydcn Museum : — Length, entire, 

 7 in. 2 lin. ; of skull, 16 lines. 



This species was first described by me from a skull in Brookes's 

 Museum, from Orkney, which is now at Leyden, and M. Schlegel has 

 described and figured a skull from a skeleton sent from the Paroe 

 Islands. It differs from the other species of the genus in the nose 

 of the skull being more slender and the teeth more numerous. The 

 teeth-scries, as in L. Electra and L. Asia, do not reach to the notch 

 which separates the beak of the skull from the brain-cavity. 



Professor Eschricht informs mo that the animal is very like D. leu- 

 copleurus, and Professor Nilsson considers them to be the same. 



The skull in Mr. Brookes's collection was 15 inches long, the 

 head 7, the beak being 8 inches, and it was 4g inches wide at its 

 base ; the teeth small and slender ; the beak long, attenuated, acute, 

 convex on the sides, and flat in the centre above, and with a deep 

 central groove. The teeth |^ . -If, smaU, slender. The bones in 

 front of the inner nostrils keeled. 



The peculiar character of this species is, that there are 82 or 83 

 vertebrae ; the muzzle is narrower, the shoulder-blade narrower, a 

 phalange to the thumb, the atlas and axis are anehylosed to the third 

 and fourth cervical vertebra; by the spinous apophysis, and the sixth 

 cervical alone has an inferior ti'ansverse process. Teeth ^q^. — Van 



Beneden, I.e. 31. 



Delphinus EsehicJitii (Schlegel, Abh. 23. t. 1, t. 2. f. 4, t. 4. f. 5) 

 is described from a skeleton from the Faroe Islands. Length 7 feet 

 4 inches. Teeth ||-. 



A male was thrown ashore on the 20th December, 1863, at 

 Flushing, now stuffed in the Museum at Ghent. Vertebra; 80 : 

 cervical 7, dorsal 15, lumbar 19, caudal 39. The fii-st and second 

 are soldered by their bodies and spinous apophyses ; the third and 

 fourth only by the spinous processes ; the fifth, sixth, and seventh 

 are free ; the sixth has two irregular processes on the lower part of 

 the sides, which are directed forwards. Teeth ^3^' visible. In 

 the upper jaw five were hidden in the membrane, one or two of 



