292 



KELIQUI.E AQUITANICJE. 



" Religious emblems were everywhere on buildings, garments, ornaments, signets ; almost every weapon 

 of war or the chase, every domestic or agricultural implement had its sacred sign." 



Page 206. M. E. Lartet's account of this specimen of engraved tusk appeared 

 also in the 'Annales des Sc. Nat.' 5" s6r. vol. iv. 1865. 



Page 212. Subsequently to the printing of Sheet " 2 F " (pp. 205-212) appeared 

 Dr. Louis Lartet's short memoir, " Gravures in^dites de 1'age du renne, paraissant 

 representer le Mammouth et le Glouton," in the ' Materiaux pour 1'histoire de 

 1'Homme,' 2 e ser., vol. v. pp. 33-36, with woodcuts of (1) two lively heads of the 

 Mammoth, in outline, on a plate of bone from Perigord (figs. 20 & 21), and (2) of 

 the Glutton (fig. 22), which we have also figured, from a Photograph, at p. 209, 

 fig. 80. 



Page 216. Reindeer. Some Notices of the Lapland Reindeer are given, by 

 M. Xavier Marmier, in P. Gaimard's 'Voyages en Scandinavie' &c., 1842, vol. i., 

 Relation du Voyage, p. 336; of the Spitzbergen Reindeer in Von Heuglin's 

 ' Reisen ' &c., 1872, Part 1, p. 192, and in J. C. Wells's ' Gateway of the Polynia ' 

 &c., 1873, p. 223. 



Page 229, No. 8. Known as the common Kite or Glede. 



Page 231, No. 14. Usually called the Little Owl. 

 No. 15. Known as the Passerine Owl. 



Page 234, line 17. For Couchas read Choucas. 



Page 235, lines 3, 9, 12, 16. For the Chough read this Chough. 



Page 236, line 8 from the bottom. For Lagopodes read Grouse. 



Page 238, line last but one. For Kjokkenmoddings read Kjokkenmoddings or 

 rather Kitchenmiddings or Kitchenmiddens. 



Page 240, lines 13 and 18. For Lagopodes read Grouse. 



Page 244, line 14. For diaphyses read shaft-bones. 

 ,, No. 50. This is known also as the Gargany. 

 No. 51. Read THE ? DUCK. 



Page 248, line 16. For 27 read 29 ; for 30 read 32. 

 line 17. For Nos. 28 and 29 read No. 31. 



