ANTHEACOTHERIIU.E. 237 



seems, moreover, that A. magnum passes imperceptibly in the other 

 direction into the smaller A. alsaticum '. The fragment of the 

 mandible of a large Anthracothere figured in the accompanying 

 woodcut (lig. 34) was obtained from the Lower Siwaliks of I)era 



Fig. :u. 



Anthracotheriwn, sp. Part of the left ramus of the mandible ; from Dera 

 Bugti. Indian Museum. -3. (From the ' Palaeontologia Indica.') 



Biigti, on the north-west frontier of India, and is very similar to 

 A. magnum, although insufficient for specific determination. It is 

 described in the ' Palseontologia Indica,' ser. 10, vol. ii. p. 176. 

 Hub. Europe. 



28770. The palate, with the complete dentition, except the inner 

 pair of incisors ; from the Lower Miocene of Ufhofen, near 

 Flonheim, Hesse Darmstadt. This magnificent specimen 

 is noticed by P. Gervais in the Zool. et Pal. Franchises, 

 2nd ed. p. 190. It agrees precisely with the typical Cadi- 

 bona form, of which a palate is figured by Gastaldi in the 

 Mem. E. Ac. Sci. Turin, ser. 2, vol. six. pi. ix. ( 1858). 



Purchased, 1853. 



M. 1433. The crown of the last upper true molar, in an unworn 

 condition ; from the Upper Eocene of Cay lux (Tarn-et- 

 Garonne), France. This specimen, like others from the 

 phosphorites, is of very large size, its length being 0,059, 

 and its greatest width 0,063. Purchased, 1884. 



M. 1433 a. The last right upper true molar, in a partially worn 

 condition ; from the Upper Eocene of Caylux. 



Purchased, 1884. 



M. 1434. Two last left upper true molars, in a middle condition 

 of wear j from the Upper Eocene of Caylux. 



Purchased, 1884. 



1 Ann. Sci. Gol. yol. viii. art. 1. p. 175. 



