190 NEW YORK ZOOLOGICAL SOCIETY. 



and for the reception of which several new orders have been 

 created. 



During the Lower Pliocene the mastodons entered South Amer- 

 ica, and the Edentates, represented by the extinct ground sloths 

 and the living armadillos, found their way into North America, 

 together with a number of hystricomorph, or porcupine-like Ro- 

 dents, which have since spread throughout the world. 



In the Upper Pliocene a more extensive interchange of animals 

 took place, South America receiving from the North its camel- 

 like llamas, its cats, its dogs, its raccoons, its numerous deer, and 

 many others. The peccaries did not reach South America until 

 the Pleistocene. 



The cats, represented by the sabre-toothed tigers, entering the 

 southern continent at this time (Upper Pliocene) very possibly 

 played a large part in the destruction of the giant herbivores, 

 which flourished at that time on the Pampas. It would almost 

 seem that the sabre-toothed tigers were modified in their mar- 

 vellous dentition for the express purpose of preying on these huge 

 and thick-skinned animals. 



South America at this time received its deer, all of which are 

 closely related to Odocoileus, but which have been there long 

 enough to evolve nearly twenty distinct species. 



The horses, too, entered South America during this period, 

 and survived there nearly until the arrival of Europeans. 



Of the animals which North America received from the south- 

 ern continent during the Pliocene, few have seemingly survived, 

 except the porcupines and armadillos. The opossum did not 

 come from South America, but is a survivor of a family of early 

 Marsupials, Didelphidae, which were once widely spread through- 

 out the northern hemisphere, but which have become extinct in 

 the Old World. 



NORTH AMERICA. 



We have in America one family of the Carnivores, Procyoni- 

 dae, and two distinct families of hoofed animals, Dicotylidae and 

 Antilocapridae, and one very important genus of the deer family, 

 Odocoileus, none of which have close relatives in the Old World. 

 All these four groups are probably of autochthonous origin, and 

 their peculiar characters are described at length below. 



EURASIA. 



The remaining large North American mammals, the wapiti, 

 the bison, the musk-ox, the mountain sheep, the mountain goat, 



