27 



result of his observation of the habits of the numerous species of all 

 these genera wliich have been, frora time to time, exhibited in the 

 Society's Gardens, that there is little or no difference, in this re- 

 spect, between the Opossums and Phalangers, but that all are equally 

 omnivorous ; and then proceeds to discuss the modifications that 

 exist among them in the number and form of the several kinds of 

 teeth, which are not, in his estimation, so very difFerent in reality 

 between the Opossums and Phalangers as they appear to be at first 

 sight. In further support of his opinion that this Eissociation of ge- 

 nera forms a natūrai family, Mr. Ogilby refers to the gradual and 

 uninterrupted transition from the naked-prehensile-tailed Ojpossums 

 of South America, through the equally naked-tailed Conscous, Ba- 

 lantia, of the Indian Išles, to the true Phalangers ; and from these 

 to the Petaurists directly on the one hand, and by means of the 

 Pseudocheirs to the Koalas on the other. 



On the prehensile power of the tail Mr. Ogilby particularly in- 

 sists, as on a faculty possessed by the greater number of the Pedi- 

 mana, and as one which is, in truth, almost confined to them : only 

 ^hree kno'vtTi genera belonging to other groups, Synetherus, Myrme- 

 cophaga, and Cercoleptes, being endowed ^vith it. He remarks on 

 this faculty as on one of considerable importance, afFording as it 

 does, in some degree, a compensation for the absence of opposable 

 thumbs on the anterior limbs. Combined with the prehensile tail, 

 in every known instance, whether among the Pedimana or in other 

 groups, is a slowness and apparent cautiousness of mction, not ob- 

 servable in any of the Quadrumana except in the Nycticebi. In none 

 of the true Quad)tttnana is the tail prehensile. 



Another evidence of the distinctness, as two groups, of the Qua- 

 drumana and the Pedimana, is fumished by their geographical distri- 

 bution. The Quadrumana are strictly confined to the limits of the 

 01d"World : the Pedimana, almost as exclusively to the NewWorld; 

 for Mr. Ogilby considers the continent of Australia to belong more 

 properly to America than to Asia. The very few apparent excep- 

 tions that occur to this latter position aje in the presence of some 

 species of Phalangers in the long chain of islands that connect the 

 south-eastern shores of Asia with the north-eastem coast of Aus- 

 tralia ; islands -vehich may, in truth, be fairly regarded as belonging 

 partly to the one and partly to the other, and the productions of 

 which might conseąuently be expected to partake of the character 

 of both. 



Mr. Ogilby subsequently adverts to another Pedimanous animal, 

 the Aye-Aye of Madagascar, constituting the genus Cheiromys ; re- 

 specting the affinities of ■vvhich he speaks with hesitation, because, 

 having never had an opportunity of examining the animal itself, he 

 is acąuainted with its characters only at second-hand. He is, how- 

 ever, disposed to regard it as representing a third group among the 

 Pedimana, to be placed in a station intermediate between the Mon- 

 keys of the New World and the Didelphidce. With the latter he 

 would, in fact, be disposed to associate it, were it not destitute of 

 the marsupial character which belongs to all the other aniraals com- 



