146 



FAUNA ANTIQUA SIVALENSIS. 



No. 232. — Right femur, upper portion, comprising head and tro- 

 chanters. 



No. 235. — Lower jaw, right side, posterior half with portion of 

 ascending ramus and leafy expansion, also the last three molars. 

 Very black and heavy. Doubtful if from Sewalik hills or Ava. 



No. 237. — Lower end of united radius? and ulna, right side. 



No. 239. — Lower end of radius and ulna, right side, considerably 

 smaller than No. 237. 



No. 240. — Upper end of femur, left side, top of trochanter broken off. 



No. 241. — Patella very entire. 



No. -244. — Astragalus. 



No. 710. — Sixth cervical vertebra, nearly perfect, of a young adult, 

 the posterior articular epiphyses not being synostosed : the neviral arch 

 and both superior transverse processes together with both vertebral 

 canals present : the latter are very short. 



No. 711. — Another sixth cervical vertebra of an older animal, and 

 tolerably perfect : vertebral canal very short. 



No. 712. — Dorsal vertebra nearly entire, with a considerable portion 

 of the spinous apophysis resembUng fig. 3 of PI. LXIV. of the Faun. 



Antiq. Sivalensis. 



C Specimens of Merycopotamus dissimilis, from the Sewalik Hills. 



No. 246. — Lower jaw, right side, comprising the horizontal ramus 

 and part of the ascending ramtis ; the expanded disc below lost by a 

 recent fracture ; contains the last three molars in situ, and little Avorn. 

 The three premolars dropped out, but their alveoli shown. The canine 

 also in situ. The two last teeth exhibit well the rugous surface of the 

 enamel, with the basal cingulum and the ruminant-hke pattern of wear 

 on the crown, which are characteristic of the genus, which is nearly 

 allied to Anthracotherium in the teeth.^ 



No. 247. — Fragment, comprising the posterior part of the ramus, 

 left side, containing the three last molars in situ, but very much con- 

 cealed by matrix. Of a larger size than No. 246. 



D. Specimens of Hippopotamus (Tet7'aprotodon) Palceindicus, from 



the Nerhudda, 



No. 16. — Specimen comprising the entire cranium, truncated ante- 

 riorly about the middle of the nasals ; containing three back molars 

 on each side, and on the left side the alveolus of the last premolar. 



' See Journ. As. Soc. vol. vi. p. 899, 

 and vol. v. p. 293. The entire speci- 

 men, as presented to the As. Soc. Mu- 

 seum, is figured in the Fauna Antiq. 



Sival. Plate Ixvii. fig. 6. The most cha- 

 racteristic part of it has been subse- 

 quently lost. 



J 



