202 Conclusion 



covery of mine after having observed the fossil- 

 ized animals and plants of many horizons prove 

 that the most careful observer is liable to misin- 

 terpret the workings of nature, showing us that 

 God's laws are past finding out by finite minds. 

 Nature is a well that man can never fathom, an 

 ocean with no shore. As long as men observe 

 and think, they will be drawing water from well 

 and ocean with no visible effect. The well will 

 still be full and the shores remain unexplored. 



Levi found the most complete skeleton of a 

 crested duckbilled dinosaur that had been dis- 

 covered in the Belly River Series by my party. 

 Mr. Brown discovered, close to the Steveville 

 Ferry, the most complete one known, and which 

 he has fully described in his Corythosaurus 

 casuarius. Bulletin of the American Museum of 

 Natural History, New York, November 2nd, 

 1916. This is the first specimen ever found in a 

 swimming pose. As if in the very act of swim- 

 ming it had died and was instantly covered up 

 in the soft mud and never disturbed until 

 Brown's pick revealed it to the world. I firmly 

 believe as I have said before, this specimen 

 proves conclusively that the conventional pose 

 taken of these duckbills as usually standing on 

 land erect is a mistake; as I have always be- 

 lieved. The one I prepared for the Victoria 

 Museum proves the same thing, and every one 

 I have seen in the beds, or have found myself, 

 point the same way, but as it will be a costly 



