378 



ADDITIONS AND COEKECTIONS. 



sharp at the end, and with bodies of much larger diameter — from 

 10 to 12 inches. Then follows a strong vertebra, the thirteenth, 

 12 inches in diameter, with a smaller and shorter transverse process, 

 which seems to me the first caudal ; but as the epiphysis is wanting, 

 there is no attachment for the haemapophysis on its hinder end. In- 

 deed its body is flattened on the under side, not carinated as the body 

 of the antecedent ; which also seems to me to prove that it is the 

 fii-st caudal. Of hsmapophyses we have four in the Museum, of 

 unequal size, the first 5 inches high, the largest 8 inches, and 3 to 

 4 inches broad between the laminae. 



" The ribs are not perfect as regards number, but the first seven 

 or eight are preserved. I send you drawings of the upper and lower 

 extremities of the first four (figs. 81-84). 



Fiff. 81. 



Fig. 82. 



Fig. 83. 



Fig. 84. 



" The sternum is wanting ; and of the os hyoideum we have only 

 the corpus, of precisely the same form as that figured in Cuvier's 

 Oss. Foss. pi. 25. f. 14. 



