91 



The Museum possesses a large series of antlers from Clacton which 

 have not been catalogued. The reference of the following speci- 

 mens is provisional. 



28012 a. The right radius ; from the Pleistocene of Clacton. 



Presented by John Brown, Esq., 1852. 



28037. The atlas vertebra ; from the Pleistocene of Clacton. 



Presented by John Brown, Esq., 1852. 



Cervus falconer!, Boyd-Dawkins 1 . 



This species is allied to the preceding, but the antlers are much 

 less palmated. 

 Nab. England. 



33507. The greater part of the left antler, with the tynes broken 

 (Fig.} off; from the Norwich Crag. This specimen is the type, 



and is figured by Boyd-Dawkins in the Quart. Journ. Geol. 



Soc. vol. xxiv. pi. xviii. figs. 9-11. Purchased, 1858. 



35857. Base of an antler; from the Eed Crag of Suffolk. This 

 (Fig.) specimen is figured by Boyd-Dawkins, loc. cit. fig. 12. 



Presented by J. Bemers, Esq., 1861. 



33512. The broken pedicle and base of an antler provisionally 

 referred to this species ; from the Norwich Crag. 



Purchased, 1858. 



48963. Base of an antler ; from the Eed Crag of Suffolk. 



Purchased, 1878. 



M. 1898. Base of an antler, provisionally referred to this species; 

 from the Eed Crag of Suffolk. 



Presented by Sir JR. Owen, K.C.B., 1884. 



41243. The distal extremity of a tibia, which may perhaps belong 

 to this species ; from the Norwich Crag of Thorpe, Norwich. 



Purchased, 1869. 



Cervus savini, Boyd-Dawkins 2 . 



This species is regarded by its founder as an ancestral form of 

 C. browni. 

 Sab. England. 



1 Quart. Journ. Geol. Soc. vol. xxiv. p. 517 (1868). 



2 Proc. E. Soc. vol. xxxviii. p. 345 (1885). 



