MAMMALIA. II 



51. Phocaena communis F. Cuv. Porpoise. 



Resident off the coast, very abundant. Great numbers 

 follow the salmon up the Humber; sometimes ascends the 

 Ouse and Wharfe as far as Cawood and Kirkby Wharfe. 



52. Delphinus delphis L. Common Dolphin. 



53. Delphinus tursio Fab. Bottle-nosed Dolphin. 



Two caught at Spurn Point, in September, 1879, were seen 

 by Mr. E. Howarth, and described by him in the Naturalist 

 (Sept. [880, vi. 26). 



54. Delphinus acutus Gray. White-sided Dolphin. 



55. Delphinus albirostris Gray. White-beaked Dolphin. 



A young female, caught off Great Grimsby, in September, 

 J ^75j was figured and described by Dr. Cunningham 

 (P.Z.S., 1876, pp. 679 to 686, and plate). The skeleton is 

 in Edinburgh University Museum. 



Order UNGULATA. 



Sub-order ART10DACTYLA. 



Fam. STJID.E. 



Sits smrfa L. fflilfr oar, 



Extinct, formerly frequented the forests of Yorkshire in large 

 numbers, especially that of Galtres, in the vale of York. 

 Its tusks are very frequently found there and in the alluvial 

 deposits of Holderness. The direct testimony as to the 

 existence of wild boars is weaker and less voluminous than 

 in the case of the wolf, but the great mass of evidence of 

 other kinds etymological and legendary suffices to war- 

 rant us in regarding it as formerly common in the county. 



Fam. CERVID^l, 



i&angite teattbits L. J^inbetr, 



56. Cervus elaphus L. Red Deer. 



Semi-domesticated, only in parks. Formerly wild, ranging 

 over the whole county. Have been for centuries kept in 

 Wharncliffe Chase and in Bolton Deer Park; and in these 

 localities are, in all 'probability, the lineal descendants of 



