IS] 



have a remarkable deviation from the ordinary structure of this part; 

 the orifice of the vagina having nearly the same relation to the ge- 

 nito-urinary passage as the urethra has in the Mammalia generally, 

 and the genito-urinary canal being, in consequence, a continuation of 

 the urinary bladder rather than of the uterus. This was particularly 

 observed in Das.Peba; but was less obvious in the fVeasel-headed 

 species, on account of the recent distension of the parts in partu- 

 rition. In neither species is there any os tincce between the vagina 

 and uterus; so that the limits of the two parts can only be loosely 

 defined by difference in diameter, and in the character of the lining 

 membrane. In the Weasel-headed species, some of the muscular fibres 

 had apparently been rujjtured in parturition ; for on injecting the parts 

 with spirit, the external cellular texture was distended at the con- 

 tracted part of the uterine canal, evidently with a force insufficient 

 to have ruptured the coats without previous lesion. At this part there 

 were numerous jagged longitudinal rugce ; two or three of which 

 were continued along the vagina, but the interior of the uterus 

 beyond was smooth. There was a difference of form in the titerus of 

 the two species. In Das. Peba it is of an oval form, the fundus ending 

 almost in a point, and the Fallopian tubes are continued from the 

 sides of the fundus without any appearance of cornua ; but in Das. 6- 

 cinctus the icterus is triangular, the fundus forming a straight line, and 

 the angles being produced a little, so as to form rudimentary cornua, 

 from which the Fallopian tubes are continued. These tubes in both 

 the species wound round the capsules of the ovaries, and terminated 

 in the usual fimbriated extremities directed towards the ovary. The 

 breadth of the base of the uterus in the ff 'easel- headed Armadillo was 

 ] inch, I line ; from the fundus to the opening of the vagina into the 

 genito-urinary canal, 2 inches. The ovaries were transversely oval, 

 measuring 3 lines by 1^. The Fallopian tubes became tortuous to- 

 wards the extremity. 



" In the absence of distinction between the uterus and vagina, 

 and in the mode of communication of what maybe considered a single 

 elongated uterine tube with the genito-urinary canal, may be ob- 

 served the first traces of that approximation to the oviparous type 

 of the genital organs which peculiarly characterizes the Marsupial 

 Edentata. 



" The urinary bladder in the adult female was an oval cavity about 

 the size of a pigeon's egg ; its coats were tolerably thick. The ure- 

 ters open close to the orifice, and very near together j a distinct 

 groove or channel commences between the two orifices, and is con- 

 tinued into the narrow canal for about 2 lines, and then terminates 

 on a ridge analogous to the verumontanum. The length of the urethra 

 is 5 lines. 



" The cceca in this individual were of equal size, half an inch in 

 length, and the same in breadth ; their relation to the ilium and the 

 structure of the ileo-cjEcal orifice were the same as in the young male. 



" The pancreas was of large size, measuring in length 4^ inches ; 

 a broad process, or subsidiary pancreas, extended from the duodenal 

 end of the gland downwards 'into the raesenterv, which confined the 



