02 IJALiENIDiE, 



intermaxillary bones contract in the middle, and then continue of 

 the same width in front. The hinder part of the jaw-hones is nearly 

 perpendicular, and the tciuporal bones are broad and erect. — Cuv. 

 O^s. Foss. V. t. 25. f. 5-7. 



The foetal skull is shorter, lower, and the hinder part of the jaw- 

 bone is more slanting. — Cuv. Oss. Foss. v. t. 25. f. 1-3. 



Cervical vertebra) all (1-7) anchylosed by the neural arches into 

 one crost.— Cuv. Oss. Foss. v. 378. 



The baleen is about 6 feet long, elongate triangular, rather rapidly 

 tapering to a fine point. The internal fibres are rather coarse, but 

 much finer than in B. Japonica. 



Balaena australis, Desmoulins, Diet. Class. H. N. ii. 101. t. 140. f. 3 

 (foetus) ; Gray, Cat. 3famm. B. 31. 104 ; Zool. Ereh. ^- Terror, 15, 

 48. t. 1. f. 3 (baleen). 



Eubalsena australis, Gray, Proc. Zool. Soc. 1864, 202. 



Baleine du Cap, Cuv. Oss. Foss. v. 3G8. t. 25. f. 1-4 (skull of foetus), 

 f. 5-8 (skull of adult), t. 20. f. 7, 11, 1.3, 23, t. 27. f. 10, 15 (ear- 

 bones), 24. 



Bala3na antarctica, Oioen, Brit. Foss. Mamm. (not Gray). 



The Cape Whale, or Right Whale of South-Sea Whalers, Bennett, 

 Narr. IVliaUng Voyage, ii. 229. 



Southern Whalebone Whale, Nunn, Narrat. Favourite, 181. fig. ? 



Common Black Whale, Ross, Antarctic Voy. i. 109, ii. 327 ? 



Inhab. Sea near the Cape of Good Hope, Dehdande. Skeleton and 

 foetus, Mus. Paris. 



a. Bone of forearm. Cape of Good Hope. 



6, c. Two plates of " South-Sea whalebone," Pacific Ocean ? Pre- 

 sented by Messrs. Smith and Simmonds. — The specimens figured 

 in the ' Voyage of the Erebus and Terror,' p, 48. tab. 1. fig. 3. 



d, e. Two plates of whalebone. Pacific Ocean ? 



/. Skull (imperfect), with the lower jaw, the vertebra) of the neck, 

 the ribs, and the blade-bone. Cape of Good Hope. 



The atlas, axis, and five cervical vertebrce are united into one by 

 their bodies, and all the spinous processes are soldered into one crest. 



Eibs 15 . 15 ; the last four and the first two do not attain the body 

 of the vertebra), and are not attached to the transverse apophyses. 



The first pair is flat and very broad, especially at the sternal end. 

 The last three are slender and short. Vertebrae 49, \ii. nuchal 7, 

 dorsal 15, lumbar and caudal 27. The chevron bones commence on 

 the eleventh and twelfth, and end at the twenty-sixth. Tlio spinous 

 processes form a nearlj^ uniform series, inclined forwards. The 

 thumb has two, the index four, the middle finger five, the ring 

 finger four, and the little finger three joints, all ending in a carti- 

 laginous dilatation. — Can. Oss. Foss. v. 379. 



The tymjianic bone is subcubical and rugose; the back is much 

 swoUen ; the inner edge is protuberant, and forms an angle with 

 the siirface nearer the outer margin ; the upper portion is pro- 

 minent and subangular, and separated from the lower portion by 

 two irregular depressions ; the hinder margin is thick, convex, and 

 rounded ; the lower surface is rather flattened, Avith an irregular- 



