336 SUPPLEMENT. 



M. 3501. Fragment of the left maxilla, showing the three true 

 (Fig.) molars in an early stage of wear ; from the Siwaliks of 

 Perim Island, Gulf of Cambay, India. This specimen 

 (fig. 54) is the type, and is described and figured by the 

 writer in the ' Quart. Journ. Geol. Soc.' vol. xliii. p. 19, 

 woodcut. Presented by Col. J. W. Watson, 1886. 



Genus SUS (pt. ii. p. 259). 

 , Wagner l . 



This species, in which the talons of the last true molars (woodcut, 

 fig. 55) are usually more complex than in S. scrofa, is probably 

 descended from the larger Siwalik . falconeri (pt. ii. p. 263) through 

 a form allied to the following species. The specimens from the 



Fig. 55. 



Sus cristatus.Tho third right lower true molar of a male. Eecent. }. 

 (From the 'Palseontologia Indica.') a, d, the middle columns of the talon. 



Narbada Valley (Nos. 36843, 36725), mentioned in pt. ii. p. 266, 

 have been referred by the writer, in the Palseontologia Indica/ 

 ser. 10, vol. iv. p. 48, to the present species. 

 Hob. India. 



M. 3445. Ten specimens of premolars and molars and one lower 

 incisor ; from the caves of Billa-Surgam, Karnul district, 

 Madras. Other specimens are described and figured by 

 the writer in the ' Palaeontologia Indica,' ser. 10, vol. iv. 

 p. 47, pi. ix. ; in the last lower molar of the fossil race the 

 complexity of the talon exceeds the average of recent ex- 

 amples (woodcut, fig. 55). Presented by 

 the Director of the Geological Survey of India, 1886. 



1 Munch, gelehrt. Auzeiger, vol. ix. p. 435, errorim 535 (1839). 



