DESCEIPTION OF PLATE XXI. 



SiVATHEEIUM GIGANTBUM. 



Fig. 1. Left side of lower jaw with four molars, about one-fifth of the 

 natural size. Copied from a drawing in Eoyle's ' Illustrations of 

 the Botany of the Himalayahs,' vol. ii., Plate VI., fig. 1 d. This 

 specimen differs from that referred to at page 257, but it was 

 described and figured by Colonel Colvin in the Journ. As. Soc, 

 vol. vi. p. 152. The specimen was found near the sources of 

 the Sombe river, north of Dadoopoor and east of Nahun, and is 

 now in the British Museum. Cat. No. 40,667. 



Fig. 2. Tliis is the important specimen discovered by Col. Culvin, and 

 now in the Museum of the University of Edinburgh, which 

 proved the correctness of Dr. Falconer's inference as to the 

 existence of a posterior pair of horns in Sivatherium. The spe- 

 cimen is drawn one-sixth of the natural size. A description of 

 it by Dr. Falconer will be found at page 266. (See also pages 

 268 & 538.) 



Fig. 3. Is a fragment from the middle of the posterior horn. It was 

 originally in Sir Proby Cautley's collection, and is now in the 

 British Museum. Cat. No. 39,525. It was found to corres- 

 pond to the posterior horn-core of the specimen represented in 

 fig. 2. The figm-e is one-sixth of the natural size, and is copied 

 from a drawing, by Mr. Ford, in an unpublished Plate of tlie 

 Fauna Antiqua Sivalensis. (See pages 268 & 539.) 



Fig. 4. Restoration by Mr. Dinkel of the skull of Sivatherium gigan- 

 teum, showing the anterior and posterior pairs of horns, one- 

 eighteenth of the natural size. 



Fig. 5. Fragment of sternum, about one-seventh of the natural size. 

 The figure is copied from a drawing, by Mr. Dinkel, in an un- 

 published plate of the Faima Antiqua Sivalensis. (See pages 

 270 & 540.) 



VOL. I. 



