CLASS I. ORDER Vie 5§ 
Manis, (scaly hizard, pangolin,) teeth none: 
tongue cylindric and extensile ; mouth narrowed 
into a snout; body covered with scales. 
Puatrypus, (duck-mouth,) mouth shaped like 
the bill of a duck ; feet webbed. 
ORDER 6. PACHYDERMA. 
Having hoofs and no clavicle ; skin very thick. 
Everuas, (clephant,) cutting teeth none in ei- 
iher jaw ; tusks in the upper jaw; grinders com- 
posed of vertical plates of a bony substance ; pro- 
bocis very long, prehensile 5 body nearly naked. 
Mastopon, (extinct animal,) grinders have a 
bristly crown, or a sort of gum, with thick conic 
points. Other tecth mostly like those of the ele- 
phant. 
HyproporTamus, (river horse, ) incisors 4 in each 
jaw, above distant in pairs, below prominent and 
the two middle ones longest; canines solitary ; 
below extremely large, long, curved, and oblique- 
jy truncated ; feet armed at the margin with each 
A hoofs. 
Sus, (swine,) incisors above 4, converging ; be- 
_ low 6, projecting ; canines below 2, long exsert : 
above 2, shorter ; snout truncated, preminent, 
moveable ; feet cleven. 
ANOPLOTHERIUM, (extinct animal,) incisors 6 in 
each jaw ; four canine teeth resembling the incis- 
ors: twenty-eight grinders forming a. continued 
series, like those of the human teeth, Feet ter- 
minate in cloven hoofs. ‘This animal must have 
borne considerable resemblance to animals of the 
order Ruminantes. 
“Ruryoceros, (rhinoceros,) one or two horns, 
solid, perennial, conical, seated on the nose, and 
