220 THE GLOBICEPS OF RISSO. 



examining the plate, first published by Fr. Cuvier, 

 The spiracle is situated far back in the head ; the 

 mouth is large ; in this indi^ddual the upper jaw alone 

 had teeth, five on each side, which were large, conical, 

 and somewhat curved, distant from each other, and 

 strongly fixed in the jaw ; the interior of the mouth 

 was covered with soft tubercles ; the eye was oval 

 and very small ; the iris golden-coloured. 



Besides these two species here delineated and de- 

 scribed, two other living ones have been named, 

 though their existence is not quite established, the 

 G. Leucocephalus and G. Ftcscus. We must now, 

 however, pass on to the 



FOSSILE GLOBICEPS. 



Globiceplialus Cortesi, Cuvier — Delphinus Cortesi, Fossile. 



We shall here shortly allude to a fossile species 

 which was discovered by Cortesi, and arranged in 

 this genus by Cuvier. This w^as the first of the 

 magnificent discoveries made by M. Cortesi of 

 Plaisance, on the Appennine hills to the south of 

 Fiorenzuola. In 1800, this enthusiastic naturalist 

 procured the fossile bones of an elephant and rhino- 

 ceros on the top of Moimt Pulgnasco, one of the 

 hills which descends firom the Appennines to the Po ; 

 they were almost on the surface. Parallel to Mount 

 Pulgnasco on the east, and separated by the streamlet 



