118 EXTINCT BRITISH ANIMALS. 
So far as we have been enabled to collect the evi- 
dence, it would appear that undoubted remains of the 
Wolf have been found in the following localities, for 
a knowledge of many of which we are indebted to 
Professor Boyd Dawkins’ able paper, “On the 
Distribution of the British Post-Glacial Mammals,” 
published in the Quarterly Journal of the Geological 
Society, vol. xxv. 1869, p. 192. 
BerxksuireE.— Windsor (Mus. Geol. Survey). 
DERBYSHIRE.—Pleasby Vale (Mus. Geol, Survey); Windy Knoll, 
Castleton (Dawkins, “ Quart. Journ. Geol. Soc.” xxxi. p. 246, 
and xxxili. p. 727); Creswell Crag Caves (Mello and Busk, 
“ Quart. Journ. Geol. Soc.” xxxi. p. 684; Dawkins, op. cit. 
Xxxil. p. 248, and xxxiii. pp. 590 and 602.) 
DervonsHIRE.—Bench Cave, Brixham (W. A. Sanford); Kent's 
Hole, Torquay (Mus. Geol. Soc., Mus Roy. Coll. Surg., and 
Mus. Oxford); Oreston, near Plymouth (Brit. Mus. and Mus. 
Geol. Soc.; Owen, ‘ Brit. Foss. Mamm.” p. 123). 
GLAMORGANSHIRE.—Gower, Bacon’s Hole(Mus. Swansea; Falconer, 
“ Paleont. Mem.” ii. pp. 183, 325, 340, 349, 501); Bosco’s 
Hole (Mus. Swansea; Falconer, tom. cit. pp. 510, 589); Crow 
Hole (Mus. Swansea; Falconer, tom. cit. p. 519); Deborah 
Den (Mus. Swansea; Falconer, tom. cit. p. 467); Long Hole 
(Falconer, tom. cit. pp. 400, 525, 538); Minchin Hole (Brit. 
Mus.; Mus. Swansea); Paviland (Mus. Oxford and Swan- 
sea; Owen, “ Brit. Foss. Mamm.” p. 124); Ravenscliff 
(Falconer, tom. cit. p. 519); Spritsail Tor (ad. pp. 179, 462, 
477, 522). 
GLOUCESTERSHIRE.—Tewkesbury (Owen, “ Brit. Foss. Mamm.”’). 
Kent.—Murston, Sittingbourne (Mus. Geol. Survey). 
Essex.—Valley of the Roding, Ilford (Sir A. Brady). 
Norroik.—Denver Sluicet (Mus. Geol. Cambr.). 
OxrorDsHIRE.—Thame (Coll. Codrington, “ Quart. Journ. Geol. 
Soc.” xx, p. 3749. 
SoMERSETSHIRE.—Benwell Cave (W. Borrer); Blendon (Mus. 
Taunton); Hutton (Mus. Taunton); Sandford Hill (Mus. 
Taunton); Uphill (Mus. Bath and Taunton); Wokey Hole 
(Mus. Oxford, Taunton, and Bristol). 
+ A landscape by R. W. Fraser “ On the Ouze near Denver Sluice” 
was exhibited at the Royal Academy in 1877, No. 794. The locality 
is a few miles to the South of Downham Market, and just below where 
the old and new Bedford rivers run into the natural stream. 
