CYSTOPHORIN/:, MIROUNGA, 545 
Lower California and Patagonia. They are enormous creatures 
rivaling the Walrus in bulk and stated to reach twenty-five to thirty 
feet in length. This great size, however, is found only in the animal 
from Heard’s Island near the Patagonian coast. Their circum- 
ference is said to reach eighteen feet. Probably the individual varia- 
tion among them is very great, and the females are much smaller 
than the males. The young and the females have no proboscis, 
but the males have one that in moments of excitement can be elongated 
to the extent of twenty inches or more. Formerly it is probable 
that these animals were quite numerous in the localities they fre- 
quented, but incessant slaughter has so reduced their numbers that 
the northern species is even now practically extinct, and the southern 
one has disappeared from some of its customary haunts. It is to 
be much regretted that man’s insatiable greed is gradually extermi- 
nating the more valuable animals from the earth. 
Subfam. I. Cystophorine. 
108. Mirounga. 
2-2, priI—t, A—4. I 
eee Claaer =a ves = 30. 
Mirounga Gray, in Griff., Cuvier’s Anim. King., v, 1827, p. 179. 
(Part.) Type Phoca proboscidea Péron = Phoca leonina Linneus. 
: Macrorhinus F. Cuv., Dict. Scien. Nat., xxx1x, 1826, p. 552. 
(nec Latreille Coleopt. 1825.) 
Rhinophoca Wagl., Nat. Syst. Amph., 1830, p. 27. 
Morunga Gray, List Ost. Spec. Brit. Mus., 1847, p. 33. 
Teeth small, one-rooted; hind feet without nails; nose of adult 
male elongated into a tubular proboscis capable of dilatation and 
extension; palate short, emarginate. 
511. angustirostris (Macrorlinus), Gill, Proc. Chicago Acad. Scien., 
1866, p. 33. Elliot, Syn. N. Am. Mamm., 1901, p. 359. 
ELEPHANT SEAL. 
Type locality. St. Bartholomew’s Bay, Lower California, Mexico. 
Geogr. Distr. Formerly from Cape Lazaro, Mexico, to Point 
Reyes, coast of California. Now practically extinct. 
Genl. Char. Superior outline of skull irregularly arched from 
the lambdoidal suture to end of the nasals; snout of male lengthened, 
narrowed at end, widest behind last molar and equal to three and a 
half times the total length of skull; squamosal truncate above the 
meatus -auditorius; palatines short, the posterior sinus semi-oval, 
the bottom being about midway between the snout and the line 
of the jugular foramina; maxille deeply incurved, line of molars 
