174 INDEX GENERUM MAMMALIUM. 
Cervulus (subg. of Cervus?) Buainvitin, 1816. Ungulata, Artiodactyla, Cervidee. 
Bull. Soc. Philomathique, Paris, 74, May, 1816; Gray, Proc. Zool. Soc. London, 
1850, 234-235 (raised to generic rank); Cat. Mamm. Brit. Mus., III, Ungulata, 
217-221, 1852. 
No species mentioned in the first description, which is as follows: ‘‘ Les ceris pro- 
prement dits . . . sont subdivisés d'aprés la longueur du pédoncule qui porte 
les bois, en deux sous-genres: le premier, le genre Cervus, a les pédoncules peu 
ou point apparens, tandis que dans le second, auquel M. de Bv. propose de 
donner le nom Cervulus, le pédoncule est plus long que le bois lui-méme, en 
sorte que ces espéces ont en tout tems [sic] la téte armée d’espéces de cornes 
analogues à celles de la Giraffe." (BLAINVILLE. ) 
Type: Cervus muntjak Zimmermann, from Java. 
Name antedated by Muntiacus Rafinesque, 1815. 
Cervulus: Dim. of Cervus. 
Cervus Linn nus, 1758. Ungulata, Artiodactyla, Cervidee. 
Systema Nature, 10th ed., I, 66-68, 1758; 12th ed., I, 92-94, 1766; Brisson, 
Regnum Animale in Classes IX distrib., 2d ed., i2, 58-65, 1762; OartBy, Proc. 
Zool. Soc. London, for 1836, No. xrvur, 135, June 27, 1837. 
Species, 8: Cervus Wee Linnzeus, C. alces Linneeus, C. elaphus Linnzeus 
(type), C. tarandus Linneeus, C. dama Linneeus, C. bezoarticus Linneeus, C. 
capreolus Linnzeus, and C. guineensis Linneeus. (Ogilby says: ‘‘Typi sunt C. 
elaphus et C. saumer aut hippelaphus Cuv.," but the second species is not 
mentioned in the original description, and therefore C. elaphus is the type. ) 
Cervus: Lat., stag, deer. 
Cesserasictis FirnHor, 1888. Ungulata, Perissodasty ly Tapiridee? 
Bull. Soc. Philomathique, Paris, 7° sér., XII, for 1887-88, No. 2, pp. 58-59, 1888. 
Type: Cesserasictis antiques Filhol, m the Eocene of Cesseras, Hérauit, France. 
Extinct. Based on ‘‘une portion de maxillaire inférieur . . . Cet échantillon 
comprend la dernicre prémolaire et les trois molaires.”’ 
Cesserasictis: Cesseras, the type locality; Z«r:c, weasel. 
Ceterhinops Lripy, 1877. Cete, i 
Journ. Acad. Nat. Sci. Phila., 2d ser., VIII, pt. 111, 280-232, pl. xxxiv, fig. 7, 1877. 
CeteLor ]rhinops Auston, Zool. Record for 1877, XIV, Mamm., 15, Index p. 2, 1879. 
Type: Ceterhinops longifrons Leidy, from the phosphate beds of Ashley River, 
South Carolina. 
Extinct. Based on ‘‘a fragment of the skull . . . composed of portions of 
the frontal, ethmoid, vomer, maxillaries, and intermaxillaries, all intimately 
coossified.”’ 
Ceterhinops: Kiros, whale; fis, 61v 06s, nose; Ow, aspect. 
Cetodiodon Jacos, 1825. Cete, Physeteridee. 
* Dublin Philos. Journ. & Scientif. Review, 1825, t." (fide Gray, Cat. Seals & 
Whales Brit. Mus., 328, 331, 332, 1866.) 
Type: Cetodiodon hunteri ( — Delphinus hunteri Desmarest = Hyperoodon rostratus). 
Based on a specimen stranded in Sept., 1824, at Killiney, near Dublin, Ireland. 
Cetodiodon: Kit 0s, whale; 07e, two; 6d@v = ó90vs, tooth—‘two-toothed whale,’ 
from the two small, pointed, conical teeth at the apex of the mandible, which 
are concealed by the gum during life. 
Cetophis Corr, 1868. Cete, Platanistidie? 
Proc. Acad. Nat. Sci. Phila., 1868, 184—185. 
Type: Cetophis heteroclitus C one. from the Miocene of € Tarlo County, Maryland. 
Extinct. Based on ‘caudal vertebrze.? 
Cetophis: Kiros, whale; óq:c, snake. 
