T69 INDEX GENERUM MAMMALIUM. 
Carolozittelia AwEaniNo, 1901. Uneulata (Carolozittelide ). 
Bol. Acad. Nac. Cien. Córdoba, XVI, 388-389, July, 1901 (sep. pp. 42-43). 
Species: Carolozittelia tapiroides Ameghino, and (. eluta Ameghino, from the 
‘Cretaceous’ of Patagonia. 
Extinct. 
Carolozittelia: In honor of Dr. Karl Alfred Zittel, 1839—, professor of geology 
and paleontology at the University of Münich; author of ‘Handbuch der 
Paleeontologie,’ 1892-93. 
Carpolagus (see Caprolagus ). Glires, Leporidee. 
Carpomys THomas, 1895. Glires, Muridee, Murinze. 
Ann. & Mag. Nat. Hist., 6th ser., XVI, 161-162, Aug., 1895; Trans. Zool. Soc. 
London, XIV, pt. vr, 406—408, pls. xxxtv, xxxvi figs. 3, 6, June, 1898. 
Type: Carpomys melanurus Thomas, from Monte Data (alt. 7,000—8,000 ft.), north- 
ern Luzon, Philippine Islands. 
Carpomys: kapzós, fruit; “6s, mouse. 
Carponycteris LvypEKKER, 1891. Chiroptera, Pteropodidee. 
LypeKKER, in Flower & Lydekker’s Mamm., Living & Extinct, 654, 1891; 
Brawronp, Fauna Brit. India, Mamm., 265-266, fig. 78, 1891. 
New name for Macroglossus Schinz, 1824, which is preoccupied by Macroglossum 
Scopoli, 1777, a genus of Lepidoptera. 
Name antedated by Kiodotus Blyth, 1840. 
Carponycteris: kapzós, fruit; vuKrepis, bat—from its food, which comprises 
‘fruit of every description.’ (BLANFoRD. ) 
Carterodon WarrRHovsE, 1848. Glires, Octodontidze. 
Nat. Hist. Mamm., II, 351—354, pl. 16, figs. 7 a-c, 1848. 
Type: Echimys sulcidens Lund, from the bone caves of Lagoa Santa, Minas Geraes, 
Brazil. The genus was based on fossil skulls in the collection of the British 
Museum from the same district in Brazil. It has since been found living. 
(WixcE, E Museo Lundii, I (b), p. 73, 1888.) 
Carterodon: Kaptepos, strong; dd@v=odo0vs, tooth—in allusion to the molar 
teeth as compared with those of Eehimys. 
[Caryoderma Corr, 1886. Reptilia, Testudinata. 
Am. Naturalist, X X, 1044-1046, Dec., 1886; WirrursTON, Science, N. S., VIII, 132, 
July 29, 1898. 
Type: Caryoderma snovianum Cope, from the Miocene (Loup Fork) of northern 
Kansas. Originally described as an Edentate, but subsequently shown by 
Williston to be a tortoise. 
Extinct. Based on ‘a portion of the dermal skeleton.’ 
Caryoderma: Kapvor, nut; déesa, skin—in allusion to ‘‘ the fact that a portion 
of the carapace is represented by osseous nuclei only which do not articulate 
with each other’’ (Cope). ] 
Casoryx (see Cosoryx). Ungulata, Artiodactyla, Bovidee. 
Castor Linnxus, 1758. Glires, Castoridee. 
Systema Nature, 10th ed., I, 58-59, 1758; 12th ed., I, 78-79, 1766; Brisson, 
Regnum Animale, in Classes IX distrib., 2d ed., 13, 90-93, 1762. 
Species: Castor fiber Linneeus (type), from Eurasia; and C. moschatus Linn:zeus, 
from southern Russia. 
Castor: Lat., beaver; from ««&ó6rcp, beaver. 
Castoroides FosrEn, 1838. Glires, Castoroididee. 
Second Ann. Rept. Geol. Survey Ohio, 80-83, 4 figs. in text, 1838. 
Type: Castoroides ohioensis Foster, from the Pleistocene of Nashport, Muskingum 
County, Ohio. 
