DRAGONS OF OLD TIME 143 
that is to say, in strata of about the same age,—of the remains 
of an animal of larger size, but in many respects nearly allied to 
the one described by Hitchcock. Both apparently belong to the 
same genus. These remains seem to represent an animal about 
six to eight feet long; but, unfortunately, they are not complete, 
although when first discovered the skeleton probably was com- 
plete, and, with proper care, might have been preserved entire. 
Another discovery was reported by Professor Marsh, in 1891, 
when two interesting specimens were secured for the Yale College 
Museum; one of these was a species of the Anchisaurus, Its 
skull and the greater portion of the skeleton were found in place. 
The skull is of moderate size and delicate structure, and in 
general shape somewhat resembles that of the curious New 
Zealand reptile known as the Sphenodon, or Tuatara. The 
vertebre and limb-bones are hollow, and the whole skeleton was 
lightly built ; the neck and tail were of moderate length. 
Writing in the American Journal of Science for February of 
1893, Professor Marsh reported that the skeletons of five small 
Dinosaurs had since been discovered in the Connecticut Sand- 
stone. They are sufficiently well preserved to give us most 
valuable information with regard to all the chief characteristics 
of the animals to which they once belonged. 
With the more complete materials now in his possession, 
Professor Marsh was enabled to make the restoration of the 
skeleton of the genus Anchisaurus, seen in Fig. 49. We may 
attribute a length of about six feet to the creature when alive. 
The skeleton, from which this restoration was chiefly made, was 
discovered entire, and apparently in the position in which the 
animal died. Unfortunately, some of the vertebr belonging to 
the neck and tail were lost before the importance of the specimen 
was realised, but the skull and nearly all the rest of the skeleton 
