JJlU DELrniXID.'E. 



Beluga Kingii, Gnni, List Mamm. B. M. 104; Zool. Erebus Sf Terror, 

 30. t. 7 (skiillj. 



Inhab. Coast of New HoUand (Cajit. P. P. King). 



a. SkuU : length, entire, 13|, of beak 5| inches ; width at notch, 4|, 

 at orbits 8 inches. New Holland. Presented by Capt. P. P. King, 

 R.N. Specimen described, Gray, Ann. Phil. 1827, and Zool. 

 Erebus and Terror, t. 7. 



This may be the Jacobite, or Tursio corpore argenteo extremitatihus 

 nigricantibus, Commerson, MS. ; Delphinus Commersonii, Lacep. 317, 

 from Cape Horn, cited by Cuv. R. A. i. 291 and Oss. Foss. v. 289 ; 

 but the colour of the Australian Beluga has not been recorded. 



A large Wliite Porpoise visits Amoy and other southerly harbours 

 rom the sea. I have in vain striven to procure specimens." — B. 

 Swinhoe, lleport Asiat. Soc. Bengal, 1863. 

 ^j^^,i/U*^Ay— CCt.''-*/^^-^^^ p3»^r<,<^'/» 



\r,\ Head round, and convex in front. Dorsal fin none. Teeth early 



\ -C-^ deciduous. Lower jaw of adult not so wide as the upper, toothless. 



\t^^ Upper jaw in the male (and rarely in the female) with a produced 



spiral tusk. 



Cervical vertebrse : first free ; second and third united by spinous 

 process, not by the body, thin ; rest free, thin. 



Monodon, Artedi, Gen. 78 ; Sipion. 108 ; Hill, Anim. 313. t. ; Limi. S. N. 



ed. 6. 17 ; Schreb. ; Grai/, 'Zool E. 6f T.2Q; Cat. Cetac. B. M. 75 ; 



Proc. Zool. Soc. 1864, 246 (not Stvainsmi). 

 Tachynices, J. Brookes, Cat. Mus. 40, 1828. 

 Narwal, ScJioiicv. Ichth. 28. 



Narvalus, Lacep. Cet. 163; Dtuneril; Pajin. Anal. Nat. 61, 1815. 

 Ceratodon, Brisson, P. A. i. 231, 1762; /%er, Prod. 142, 1811; 



Wuf/ler, N. S. Amph. 34, 1830. 

 Diodoii (or Diodonta), Storr, Prod. Mamm. 42, 1780. 

 Monoceros, Charlet. Exerc. Pise. 47. 



Monoceros piscis, Willughb. Pise. 42. t. A. f. 2, App. p. 12. 

 Orvx, Oken, Lehrb. Naturg. 672, 1815. 

 Tachynicidffi, J. Brookes, Cat. Mus. 40, 1828. 



Right tusk generally not developed. Female generally without 

 tusk, but sometimes has one. — See Linn. Trans, xiii. 620. 



In the Museum of the Royal College of Surgeons there are several 

 Hunterian preparations of the skull of this animal, nos. 1147, 1148, 

 1149, 1150, 1151, showing the two rudimentary teeth enclosed in the 

 cavity in the female, and the single exserted one in the male skulls. 



Mr. Knox observes, the female Narwal skulls have two rudimentarj^ 

 teeth in the upper jaw, which are rarely protruded. In the foetus, on 

 each side of the upper jaw, in the usual place, are two hollow teeth, 

 obviously the extremities of the spiral permanent teeth of the male ; 

 they are completely imbedded in the jaw ; and if the animal is a 

 male the left tooth continues to grow, the right after a time fills up, 

 its central cavity containing the pulp disappears, and, after attaining 

 a growth of five or six inches, the jaw elongates to correspond with 



