452 Miscellaneous. 
elevation belonging to the Alleghany range, in a coarse-grained sand- 
stone, are eight remarkable impressions, all having the same dimen- 
sions, the same distance apart, and forming a continuous series in a 
slightly bent line. Each is of an ovoidal form, 13 inches long, 
9 broad, and from 3 to 6 deep. ‘The impression is deep and ovoidal 
before, but superficial behind, as though made by an animal with a 
long and flexible pastern. 
Twenty-seven miles from Greensburgh, on the summit of Chesnut 
ridge, in a coarse-grained sandstone, are numerous imprints, as per- 
fect as they are anomalous and remarkable. These imprints are of 
. different kinds: the greatest number seem to have been made by 
ruminant mammals, as the feet were cleft so as to resemble those of 
the ox and deer, but much larger. ‘They are of various sizes, and 
differ from most living types in having two hind hoofs, which made 
deep and vivid impressions from one to two inches behind the main 
track. 
The length of the largest, including the posterior imprints, is 9 
inches, breadth 54 inches. 
The smaller vary from 43 to 53 inches in length, by 24 to 4} in 
breadth. The general form of these foot-marks is ovoidal, the largest 
portion being behind as well as the widest part of the cleft. The 
posterior impressions are each about the size of a walnut. The in- 
terval between each foot-mark is about 2} feet in the larger, and 
18 inches in the smaller. 
Besides these, and a few others which are identical or nearly so 
with some which I have already described on a former occasion, there 
are four or five huge imprints of a still more remarkable character 
than any that have heretofore met my eye. ‘They are in a conti- 
nuous line: each imprint is 13 inches long and 9 wide. The toes, 
which are five in number, are thick and very perfect. Four of these 
imprints are quite perfect, others are less so, and many are nearly 
obliterated. The average distance between each impression is 3 feet 
7 inches, with the exception of the last two, which are 7 feet apart. 
This seems to indicate that there was once a track between these 
two, which has been defaced by the erosive action of the elements 
upon the rock during a series of ages.—Proceedings of the Acad. Nat. 
Scienc. of Philadelphia. 
Description of a new species of Parus from the Upper Missouri. 
By Epwarp Harris. 
Parus septentrionalis. Young, in summer plumage. 
Bill brownish black; short and stout. Iris dark brown. Feet gray- 
ish blue. Upper part of the head, chin and fore-neck dull black ; the 
black of the head scarcely descending to the hind-neck, and that on 
the fore-neck hardly reaching to the breast. Cheeks and sides of the 
neck, a line running from the base of the bill under the eye and al- 
most meeting on the hind-neck, white. Back grayish, slightly tinged 
with yellow. Quills and tail-feathers dark grayish brown, margined 
with pure white; secondaries conspicuously so, Lower parts gray- 
