ODONTOMYSOPS—OGMORHINUS. 471 
Odontomysops AMEGHINO, 1902. Glires ? (Odontomysopide). 
Bol. Acad. Nac. Cien. Cérdoba, X VII, 35, May, 1902 (sep. p. 33). 
Type: Odontomysops spiniferus Ameghino, from the Notostylops beds of Patagonia. 
Extinct. 
Odontomysops: 6600s, d60vTos, tooth; 40s, mouse; oy, aspect. 
Odontostylus Tnovrssanr, 1898. Marsupialia, Amphitheriide. 
Cat. Mamm., new ed., fasc. v, 1247, Nov., 1898. 
Type: Stylodon robustus Owen, from the middle Purbeck of Durdlestone Bay, 
Swanage, Dorsetshire, England. 
Name preoccupied by Odontostylus Gray, 1840, a genus of Mollusca. Replaced 
by Trouessartia Cossmann, 1899 (preoccupied); and later by Trouessartella 
Cossmann, 1899. 
Extinct. 
Odontostylus: 6800s, dd0vtos, tooth; 670Aos, pillar. 
Odotenotherium (see Odobenotherium ). Fer, Pinnipedia Odobenide. 
Oedipomidas RrrcuEeNBACH, 1862. : Primates, Hapalidee. 
Vollstind. Naturgesch. Affen, 5-6, pl. 11, figs. 18-20, 1862. 
New name for (Edipus Lesson, 1840, which is preoccupied by Oedipus Tschudi, 
1838, a genus of Amphibia. 
Oedipomidas: (GEdipus +- Midas. 
Gdipus (subgenus of Midas) Lesson, 1840. Primates, Hapalidee. 
Species Mamm., 184, 197-200, 1840; Nouv. Tableau Régne Animal, Mamm., 9, 
1842; Gray, Cat. Monkeys, Lemurs & Fruit-eating Bats Brit. Mus., 65-66, 
1870 (raised to generic rank). 
Type: (Edipus titi Lesson (=Simia edipus Linnzeus), from Para, Brazil.* 
Name preoccupied by Oedipus Tschudi, 1838, a genus of Amphibia. (The latter 
name is identical in form, but probably differs etymologically, being derived 
according to Agassiz’s Nomenclator Zool, from ó:0éc, to swell, and zovs, 
foot.) Replaced by Oedipomidas Reichenbach, 1862. 
(Edipus: From the original name of the type species. 
CEdocephalus Gray, 1866. Glires, Hystricidee. 
Proc. Zool. Soc. London, 1866, 308-309. 
Type: Acanthion cuvieri Gray. The locality of the type specimen was unknown 
when the species was described in 1847, but the habitat was given in 1866 as 
North Afkrica. 
(Edocephalus: 018£co, to swell, to become swollen; Ke~adAn, head—trom the skull, 
which is ‘ ventricose,’ with large nasals dilated behind. 
Oegoceros (see Aegocerus). Ungulata, Artiodactyla, Bovidze. 
Cgocerus (see Egocerus). Ungulata, Artiodactyla, Bovidee. 
Cnotherium (see Ocnotherium). Edentata, Dasypodidee. 
Ogmobalena Escuricnut, 1849. Cete, Baleenidee. 
K. Danske Vidensk. Selsk. Skrifter, Naturv. & Math. Afd., Kjóbenhavn, 5te 
Rekke, I, 108, 1849; Unters. Nord. Wallthiere, 108, 1849. 
Species: The ‘ Furehvaler eller Rórhvaler " of the northern seas. 
Ogmobalzna: Oy 0s, furrow; -- Balena—in allusion to the furrows on the throat. 
Ogmorhinus Perrers, 1875. Fer», Pinnipedia, Phocid:e. 
Monatsber. K. Preuss. Akad. Wiss., Berlin, June, 1875, 393 footnote. 
New name for Stenorhinchus F. Cuvier, 1826, which is preoccupied by Stenorhyn- 
chus Lamarck, 1819, a genus of Crustacea; and by Stenorhynchus Megerle, 1823, 
a genus of Coleoptera. 
Antedated by Hydrurga Gistel, 1848. 
Ogmorhinus: by os, furrow; is, pir óc, nose—‘ wegen der langen furchenfOrmigen 
Nasenlócher.' 


*Forbes gives the distribution of this species as New Granada (Allen's Nat. 
Library, Handbook Primates, I, 141, 1894). 
