The Fossil Beds of Alberta. 211 



small, the jaws sheathed in horn. The small teeth behind show 

 little sign of much use. It would not surprise me to find 

 species with none in functional use. 



I would like to tell of other wonders of the Belly river series 

 and the results of our four years' labor there, but time and 

 space forbid. I have calculated that it will take twenty years 

 of careful labor by four competent preparators to get all the 

 material in shape for study and exhibition. Last season Levi 

 and I were in the employ of the British Museum, collecting in 

 the Belly river series, below Steveville, Alberta. We secured 

 three skeletons of Brown's Cori/thosaurus, which can be 

 mounted, two we hope as slab mounts in their own matrix, and 

 one as an open mount. We secured forty-five large boxes full 

 of the material. Besides the dinosaurs, we found a new turtle 

 and a fine shell of one already known. 



Lawrence. 



