376 NEW YORK STATE MUSEUM 
in a swamp on the farm of Gen. W. H. Adams of Clyde. The situation 
in which it was found is an elevated plateau or level tract of land, a por- 
tion only of which would be denominated a swamp, though the whole surface 
is covered with a peaty soil which supports a heavy growth of elm, hem- 
lock and ash with some maple and beech . . . The precise locality of the 
fossil was near the termination of a shallow ravine or the bed of a small 
stream which flows into Lake Ontario in a northwesterly direction” (’47, 
p- 385-86). : 
BIBLIOGRAPHY 
The following bibliography consists of the titles of the works referred 
to in the present paper, with the exception of those mentioned in the tables 
of synonymy only, where full references are always given. 
Allen, Harrison. ’64. Monograph of the bats of North America. (see 
Smithsonian miscellaneous collections. no. 165. June 1864) 
—— ’93. Monograph of the bats of North America. (see United 
States national museum. Bulletin 43. 1893) 
Allen, J. A. ’76. American bisons, living and extinct. (see Geologi- 
cal survey of Kentucky. 1876, v. 1, pt 2, p. 1-9, 1-246) 
—— ’77- Monographs of North American rodentia. (see United States 
geological survey of the territories gth report. Aug. 1877) 
—— 80. History of North American pinnipeds, a monograph of the 
walruses, sea-lions, sea-bears and seals of North America. (see 
United States geological and geographical survey of the territories. 
Miscellaneous publications. no. 12. 1880) 
— ’94a. Notes on the mammals of New Brunswick, with description 
of a new species of Evotomys. (see American museum natural his- - 
tory. Bulletin 6. p. 99-106) 
—— ’94b. Remarks on a second collection of mammals from New 
Brunswick, and on the rediscovery of the genus Neotoma in New 
York state. (see American museum natural history. Bulletin. 22 
Dec. 1894. 6: 359-64) 
American ornithologists’ union. Bo, Check-list of North Ameri- 
can birds. Abridged ed. revised. 1880. 
Audubon, J. J. & Bachman, J. ’41. Description of new species 
of quadrupeds inhabiting North America. (see Academy natural 
sciences, Philadelphia. Proceedings. Oct. 1841. 1:92~-103) 
