480 FOSSIL TURTLES OF NORTH AMERICA 
of the species. Some of the specimens mentioned by that author are either not present or have 
not been recognized. They had all been collected in the Bridger beds of Wyoming. The type 
came from Cottonwood Creek and therefore from level B, and has the American Museum’s 
number 3937, 
In the year 1903 the American Museum of Natural History sent a party into the Eocene 
Badlands in the region of Fort Bridger, Wyoming. Among the materials collected by this 
party 1s a nearly complete carapace and a fragmentary plastron, which are believed to belong to 
the above species. These parts are popresented by figs. 640 and 641. The specimen bears the 
catalog number 5978. 
In form the carapace is oval, or elliptical, narrowed in front, rounded behind. It is con- 
siderably archt, the midline rising to a height of 73 mm. above the borders. The length is 
310 mm.; the width, 270 mm. The carapace (fig. 640) consists of a nuchal, 8 pairs of costals, 
a preneural, and 6 neurals. The nuchal has a length of 145 mm. and a fore-and-aft width of 
———_ 
X 
hypo 641. 
a N 
| 
| 
Se se 
Fics. 640 aND 641.—Plastomenus @demius. Carapace and plastron. 
Xt. No. 5978 A. M. N. H. 
640. Carapace. 641. Plastron. 
38 mm. along the midline. Its hinder border is somewhat excavated for the preneural. The 
costals widen toward their distal ends. The free border of each is beveled. The free ends of 
the ribs are very short. The thickness of the costals is about 5 mm. Those of the sixth pair 
inclose between their proximal ends the sixth neural; but behind this they join in the midline. 
The costals of the seventh and eighth pairs also meet in the midline, the former for a distance 
of 20 mm., the latter for a distance of 65 mm. 
The preneural is pentagonal, 24 mm. long, and of about the same width. The first neural 
is pentagonal, 25 mm. long and 19 mm. wide. The right postero-lateral side is very short, and 
articulates with the second right costal. The third neural is four-sided, 34mm. long and 16mm. 
wide. The next 3 neurals are hexagonal, with the narrow end forward. The fifth is 13 mm. 
wide. The last neural is small, 15 mm. long and 6 mm. wide. 
The sculpture of the surface consists of longitudinal ridges, or welts, and shallow pits. 
Neither the welts nor the pits are conspicuous. The welts are obsolete on the anterior half of 
the carapace, most distinct posteriorly. Running longitudinally as they do, they cross the cos- 
tals of the middle of the carapace at right angles. Posteriorly they cross the costals obliquely. 
A close examination of the welts shows that they resemble those of the type of the species. On 
the last costal they run in the same direction and become resolved into low tubercles, but these 
are not so swollen as in the type. 
