470 FAMILY PHOCHLE. 



of a " Seal" found associated with those of Mastodon, Elephant, 

 Horse, Deer, Elk, etc., in the Post-pliocene deposits of Newbern, 

 North Carolina, in his description of his " Sus Americanus". 

 The specimens here referred to appear to have never been 

 described, and the only information we have respecting the 

 occurrence of Phocine remains at this locality is Dr. Harlan's 

 casual reference to the matter, as above indicated. 



2. Martha's Vineyard, Massachusetts. Sir Charles Lyell, in 

 a paper u On the Tertiary Strata of the Island of Martha's Vine- 

 yard in Massachusetts ", in enumerating the organic remains col- 

 lected by him at that locality, mentions,* under the head of 

 Mammalia, "A tooth, identified by Prof. Owen as the canine 

 tooth of a Seal, of which the crown is punctured. It seems 

 nearly allied to the modern Cystophora proboscidea". As no 

 description is given, its positive determination is impossible. 

 No other Seal remains, so far as known to me, have been found 

 at that locality. 



3. Richmond, Virginia. As will be presently noticed more 

 fully, some supposed Phocine remains were described by the 

 late Professor Wymam from the Tertiary deposits underlying 

 the city of Eichmond, Virginia. They came from two local- 

 ities, and consisted of quite different materials. The specimens 

 are at present unknown, so that their reexamination is impos- 

 sible. A part of these remains were in all probability Squalo- 

 dont, while others may have been Phocine. A detailed account 

 of these specimens, with the original descriptions in full, is 

 given below, under the heading ^Phoca wymani". 



4. South Berwick, Maine. Professor Wyruan, in 1850,t re- 

 ferred briefly to some Seal bones found at South Berwick,. 

 Maine, in " marine mud", at a depth of thirty feet from the sur- 

 face, in digging a well. They "proved to be an ulna and a 

 radius", but no description of them is given, they being men- 

 tioned simply as "bones of a Seal". Professor Leidy| has con- 

 jecturally referred them to Phoca grcenlandica. 



II. Squalodont Remains described as Phocine. No less than 

 three species referred originally to "Phoca" are in all proba- 

 bility referable, in part or wholly, to Squalodon, as is more or 

 less explicitly admitted by their original describer. These are 

 Phoca wymani, P. debilis, and P. modesta, of Leidy. The first 



*Proc. Geol. Soc. Lond., vol. iv, 1843-1845, p. 32; Amer. Journ. Sci., vol. 

 xlvii, 1844, p. 319; Phil. Mag., vol. xxxiii, 1843, p. 188. 

 t Amer. Journ. Sci. and Arts, 2d ser., vol. x, 1850, p. 230, footnote. 

 I Extinct Mam. N. Amer., 1869, p. 415. 



