144 ACCOUNTS, ETC., OF THE BRITISH MUSEUM. 



Rhinoceros, Chalicotherium, &c., from Steinheim, and a tusk 

 of Sus from Samos. 



About thirty specimens of remains of Hippopotamus, &c., 

 from the Bedford Gravel, &c. 



2. Aves. — The type specimen of Oolithes Bathonicce figured 

 in the Quart. Journ., Geol. Soc, 1860, p. 108. 



Thirty-three bones of ^pyornis, from the Tertiary, Sirabe,^ 

 and other localities in Madagascar. 



Twenty bird bones from the Cambridge Greensand. 



A series of thirty-two bird-bones Milvus, Totanus, 

 Palceortyx, Phasianus, Szc, from La Grive St. Alban. 



A very long and slender tibia of Dinornis, showing marks 

 of cutting, from North Island, New Zealand. 



3. Reptilia. — Twenty-one vertebrae and twenty-one parts of 

 limbbones of Dinosauria, from the Jurassic, S.W. Madagascar, 

 and eighteen Reptilian remains from the Tertiary of Sirabe. 



A fossil Lizard, Aigialosaurus, from the Neocomian, 

 Austria. 



Three hundred and eighty-four bones, scutes and teeth of 

 Eeptilia from the Cambridge Greensand, also 24 bones of 

 Crocodilia from the Oxford Clay. 



Seventy specimens of Coal-Measure Amphibia, four being 

 figured and described. 



A crocodile jaw and bones, also one egg and two portions 

 of shell of Tortoise, from Madagascar. 



A very complete Pliosaurian skull with teeth, a Flesio- 

 saurus with head and neck, and a dorsal series of vertebrae 

 with well preserved pectoral and pelvic girdles ; also a skull 

 and lower jaw of Peloneustes, with a few cervical vertebrae 

 and paddle bones, all from the Oxford Clay, Fletton. 



A series of bones of Iguanodon Fittoni, from Hollington 

 Quarry, and of Iguanodon Dawsoni, from Buckshole Quarry, 

 near Hastings, also a femur and vertebrae of Pleurosaurus, 

 and a tibia and vertebrae of Crocodile. 



4. Pisces. — A collection of Fish-remains from the Upper 

 Silurian of the Isle of Oesel, viz, : sixteen specimens of 

 Thyestes verrucosus, six of Cephalaspis Schrenki and six of 

 Tremataspis Schrenki. 



Eleven Fish remains from the Jurassic formations of Glou- 

 cestershire and Dorset. 



Six fishes from the Lithographic stone, Solenhofen, 

 Bavaria. 



Ten specimens of Paloeospondylus Gunni, one of Pterichthys 

 Milleri, and three dermal plates of Homosteus Milleri (fig*^. 

 and descd. in Proc. Zool. Soc. 1891, pp. 198-201, figs. 1-4); all 

 from the Old Red Sandstone, Caithness. 



A series of teeth of Lepidotus, Ghrysophvys, and Gyrodus ; 



also 



