AUTHOR S PREFACE. x1 
discoveries of Marsh, Cope, Leidy, ane) OLhers, in America, 
not to mention some important European discoveries, 
should have attracted so little notice in this country. In 
the far and wild West a host of strange reptiles and quad- 
rupeds have been unearthed from their rocky sepulchres, 
often of incredibly huge proportions, and, in many cases, 
more weird and strange than the imagination could con- 
ceive ;i' and yet. the :public’i have never) heard: of these 
discoveries, by the side of which the now well-known 
“lost creations” of Cuvier, Buckland, or Conybeare sink 
into the shade. For once, we beg leave to suggest, the 
hunery pressman, seeking “copy,” has failed to see a 
good thing. Descriptions of some of “ Marsh’s monsters” 
and how they were found, might, one would think, have 
proved attractive to a public ever on the look out for 
something new. 
Professor Huxley, comparing our present knowledge of 
the mammals of the Tertiary era with that of 1859, states 
that the discoveries of Gaudry, Marsh, and Filhol, are “as 
if zoologists were to become acquainted with a country 
hitherto unknown, as rich in novel forms of life as Brazil 
or South America once were to Europeans.” 
The object of this book is to describe some of the larger 
and more monstrous forms of the past—the lost creations 
of the old world ; to clothe their dry bones with flesh, and 
suggest for them backgrounds such as are indicated by 
the discoveries of geology: in other words, to endeavour, 
by means of pen and pencil, to bring them back to life. 
The ordinary public cannot learn much by merely gazing 
at skeletons set up in museums. One longs to cover their 
nakedness with flesh and skin, and to see them as they 
were when they walked this earth. 
