(65) 
a full: and particular account has already been given 
by. Joseph Whidbey, Esq. in the sia saat Trans- 
actions of the Royal Society. 
And, of the Fossil Bones and Teeth, which have 
been very recently brought io light, in the further 
progress of working those Quarries, it would be 
premature in me to say much, or to offer an opi- 
nion on the subject; as they have been put for 
examination into the hands of Gentlemen, who are 
much more competent to the task, and from whom, 
the Public may with confidence expect an interesting 
description. 
_.In quantity they filled several large baskets, and 
belonged to many animals. Amongst others, might 
be distinguished the teeth of an extinct Species of 
the hyena, and those of the wolf;—the teeth of the 
deer, of the cow, and of the horse:—but, neither 
the bones nor the teeth of any of the larger class 
of animals, such as the elephant, or rhinoceros, were 
met. with. They were envelopped in a mass of ap- 
parently black mould and clay, in rather an exten- 
sive hollow or cayern, situated thirty feet from. the 
R 
