ANOEMA—ANOMALURUS. 105 
Anoéma F. Cuvirr, 1809. Glires, Caviidee. 
Nouv. Bull. Soc. Philomathique, Paris, No. 24, p. 394, Sept., 1809; Ann. Mus. 
Hist. Nat., XIX, 292-293, pl. 15, fig. 12, 1812. 
Anemas F. Cuvier, Dict. Sci. Nat., LIX, 493, 1829. 
Anema AGassiz, Nomenclator Teel. Mamm., 2, 1842; Index Univ., 20, 1846; 
Cuvier, Hist. Nat. Mamm., VII, Table gén. et méth., 4, 1842. 
Based on the *cochon d’ Inde’ ( Cavia cobaya Pallas), from Brazil. 
Anoéma: Fr. anoeme, ‘sans force’ (a-, without; vózua, perception, thought; 
cf. &vonucv, without understanding)—from its supposed lack of intelligence. 
Ancema Kówrc, 1825. Glires, Ochotonide. 
* Icones, Foss. Sectiles, pl. x, fig. 126, 1825" (fide LvpEKKER, Cat. Foss. Mamm. 
Brit. Mus., I, 257, 1885, in synonymy); Forsytra Mason, Trans. Linn. Soc. 
London, 2d ser., Zool., VII, pt. 9, pp. 449, 450, Nov., 1899 (in synonymy ). 
Type: Anema wningensis Konig, from Oeningen, Germany. 
Name preoccupied by Anoéma F. Cuvier, 1809, a genus of Caviidee. 
Extinet. Based on a skeleton. 
Anema: a- without; vonua, perception, thought. 
Anoglochis (subgenus of Cervus), Croizer & Jopert, 1826.* Ungulata, Cervidee. 
Recherches Ossem. Foss. Dépt. Puy-de-Dóme (Expl. des planches), 5° livr. 
pls. 1-v, 8° livr. pl. vir, 1826; Lesson, in Férussae's Bull. Sci. Nat. et Géol., 
Paris, XI, 98, 1827; LvpEkxEn, Deer of all Lands, 19, 238-248, figs. 65-67, 
1898 (raised to generic rank). 
Species, 3: Cervus ardei, ramosus, and C. cusanus Croizet & Jobert, from Mt. 
Perrier, Dépt. Puy-de-Dóme, France. 
Extinct. Based chiefly on antlers, teeth, and long bones. 
Anoglochis: &v@, up; y Ac yis, point: [Parce que] **le 1° andouiller du bois est 
éloigné de la couronne." (Lzssow.) The antlers have a subbasal snag, but no 
brow tine. (LYDEKKER. ) 
Y 
Anomalocera (see Anomolocera). Ungulata, Artiodactyla, Cervide. 
Anomalomys GarLLARD, 1900. Glires, Murid:e, Cricetinze. 
Comptes Rendus, Paris, CX X X, No. 4, pp. 191-192, Séance du 22 Jan., 1900. 
Type: Anomalomys gaudryi Gaillard, from the Miocene of Grive-Saint-Alban, 
France. 
Extinct. Based on a cranium, a palatal arch, and several mandibles showing 
teeth of different ages. 
Anomalomys: av Ouados, irregular, anomalous; “0s, mouse—in allusion to the 
arrangement of the enamel of the molars, ‘‘c’est cette disposition de l'email, 
irréguliére par comparaison avec ce qui existe chez les autres Rongeurs, que 
nous avons voulu rappeler dans le nome de genre." 

(GAILLARD. ) 
Anomalurus WarERHOUSE, 1843. : Glires, Anomaluridze. 
Proc. Zool. Soc. London, for 1842, 124-127, Jan., 1843. 
Type: Anomalurus fraseri Waterhouse, from Fernando Po, West Afric: 
Anomalurus: &véjaAÀoc, strange; oDp«, tailt—in allusion to the scales, 15-16 in 
number, arranged in two longitudinal series on the under side of the basal 
third of the tail. 

* The ANT 826, is on the authority of Lesson. Lydekker (1. c., 238) states TR 
the explanations of the plates of Croizet & Jobert's work were never published except 
on the original covers of the livraisons. Agassiz (Nomenclator Zool., Mamm., p. 2, 
1842) refers Anoglochis to Fischer's Zoognosia, 1813, but the name is not found in 
that work. 
t Waterhouse gives the derivation as av ojlos, out of law; o?p«, tail. 
