648 PROF. R. OWEN ON DINORNIS. [Dec. 13, 
6. GaLaco (OTOLICNUS) TENG. 
Galago teng, Sundevall, Kongl. Vetensk. Akad. Handling. 1842, 
p- 201. 
Otolicnus galago, var. sennariensis, Wagner, Schreb. Suppl. v. 
p. 158. 
Subgenus 4. Hemicaxaco, Dahlbom (1856). 
Characters.—Size very small; muzzle shorter than orbital open- 
ing; first upper premolar not canine-like; angle of mandible produced 
downwards as well as backwards ; tarsus very long ; preemaxille pro- 
duced strongly forwards in front of incisors. 
GaLaco (HEMIGALAGO) DEMIDOFFII. 
Hemigalago demidoffii, Dablb. Studia Zool. p. 230; Coquerel, 
Rev. et Mag. de Zool. (1859) xi. p. 457. 
Galago demidoffii, Fischer, in Act. de la Soc. des Natur. de Mose. 
i. p. 24. f. 1 (1806); Syn. p. 68; Desm. Mamm. p. 104, sp. 128; 
Tsid. G. St.-Hil. Cat. des Prim. p. 81; Gray, P. Z. 8. 1863, p. 148 
(skull) ; Peters, P. Z. S. 1863, p. 380, pl. xxxv. 
Otolicnus demidoffii, Wagner, Schreh. Suppl. v. p. 160. 
O. peli, Temm. Esquis. Zool. Leyden (1853), 1%° partic, Mamm. 
p- 42. 
Galagoides demidofit, A. Smith, 8. Afr. Journ. ii. p. 32 (1835). 
‘Galago murinus, Murray, Edinb. Phil. Journ. (with plates) new 
ser. x. (1859) p. 243; xi. (1860) p. 99. 
December 13, 1864. 
John Gould, Esq., F.R.S., in the Chair. 
Prof. Owen, F.R.S., read a further memoir on Dinornis, being the 
ninth of a series of contributions to the Society’s ‘ Transactions ’ on 
this subject. The present section contained the description of the 
skull, atlas, and scapulo-coracoid bone of Dinornis robustus, Owen, 
and was founded partly on materials submitted to his examination by 
Dr. D. S. Price, consisting of a mutilated cranium and other bones 
which had been obtained from the bottom of a crevice about 50 feet 
deep in a limestone rock, situated a few miles south of Timaru, in 
the Middle Island of New Zealand, and partly on a skull found with 
a skeleton almost entire in the valley of Manuherikia, Otago. The 
skeleton last referred to had been disinterred by some gold-miners 
from one of the large basins of ancient tertiary date which charac- 
terize the auriferous region of the interior of the province of Otago, 
and had been transmitted to the Museum of the Yorkshire Philoso- 
