160 



PROCEEDINGJ OF THE CANADIAN INSTITUTE. 



Prairie Level. Dark soil 1 



Dark clay 3 



Brown clay 3 



Light clay 4 



Dark sandstone 40 



Light sandstone, with petrified ): 

 wood 6 { 



Dark clay 8 -! 



Greenish clay with some selenite . 25 



Light sandstone 20 



—110 

 ^109 

 —106 

 —103 

 —99 



—59 

 —53 



—45 



-20 



On tlie occasion of a second visit to this place the following year '84, 

 better results followed my investigations. Many fragments of fossil 

 bone were secured but all of little use in identifying the animals to 

 which these remains belonged. However I had the good fortune to 

 discover some teeth. These with some fragments of peculiar bones 

 were forwarded to Prof. Cope, of Philadelphia, who identified the 

 teeth as belonging to a lai^ge deinosaur of the genus Lfelaps allied 

 to the Megalosaurus, and the peculiar bones as fragments of the 

 carapace of a Cretaceous land turtle of the genus Trionyx. 



Portions of other teeth Avere obtained ; but not conijile'e enough for 

 identification ; in addition to these, a vertebra was found which in 

 all probability belonged to a fish. 



