FAMILY SORECID. yd 
Motalulength; j= 25 = oat 4°0. Ofiitail ee ee eae Ties 
Length of head and body,. 2°5. Ofshead! sae sce aaa 0°8. 
This hardy little animal is found as far north as the sixty-seventh degree of latitude, and was 
first noticed by Forster in the work cited above, notwithstanding the English translator of 
Cuvier asserts ‘that no genuine Shrews are to be found except on the ancient continent.” 
The tracks of this species are seen frequently during winter on the snow ; and this has been 
noticed by Richardson, even when the thermometer stood at 40 to 50 degrees below zero. 
They are found in all parts of the State, but we are as yet uncertain as to their southern 
range. 
THE CAROLINA SHREW. 
SorEX CAROLINENSIS, 
PLATE XXI. FIG, 2. 
Sorex carolinensis. BACHMAN, Ac. Nat. Sc. Vol. 7, p. 366, pl. 23, fig. 1. 
Characteristics. Uniform iron grey. ‘Tail short, flat, nearly half the length of the head. 
Larger than the preceding. 
Description. Body rather robust. Snout long and slender, with a bilobate tip. No external 
ears, but simply an auditory aperture. Whiskers long, and in some lights whitish. Eyes 
exceedingly minute. Fore feet rather robust, covered sparsely with hairs; hind feet more 
slender. Nails moderate, subequal. Tail flat, with a small thin pencil at tip. Dental for- 
mula: Incisors, 3; cheek teeth, $= 36; all piceous at their tips. 
Color. A bright lustrous iron-grey over the surface, the base being of a slate color. Nose 
and feet flesh-colored. Head and body 4°0. Head 1°0. ‘Tail 0°4. 
We have referred, with some doubts, specimens of a Shrew commonly found in this State, 
to this species. In this we have followed Bachman, until we had an opportunity of examin- 
ing a specimen in a living state. Such an occasion has not yet presented itself. In the only 
one which I had an opportunity to examine with any attention, the number of cheek teeth 
exceeded those assigned to this species by Bachman. According to this author, their nests 
are about a foot under ground, and composed of fibres of roots and grasses. They feed on 
worms, larve of insects, etc. This species requires farther examination. 
(EXTRA-LIMITAL.) 
S. cinereus. (Bacuman, Ac. Sc. Vol. 7, p. 373, pl. 23, fig. 3.) Dark iron-grey above, silver grey 
beneath ; teeth 26; length 3+3. Carolina. 
S. richardsonii. (Id. ib. p. 383, pl. 24, fig. 5.) S. parvus. (Ricuarpson, Vol. 1, p.8) Rusty * 
brown above, beneath cinereous; total lencth 4-2; teeth 82. N. W. Territory. 
