SMITHSONIAN MISCELLANEOUS COLLECTIONS VOL. 59 



with any certainty to either E. primigenius or E. columbi, being ac- 

 companied by neither description nor figure. From the map it will be 

 seen that most of these finds of E. primigenius lie on some one of 



FIG. 2. Distribution of the hairy mammoth, Elephas 



FIG. 3. Distribution of the Pleistocene elephant, Elefihas columbi. 



the drift-sheets or not far away from them. Two cases occur in 

 North Carolina. Possibly, at the height of some glacial stage, some 

 individuals, that found a congenial dwelling place on the mountains 

 of this region spent their winters on the sea-coast. It is especially 



