150 ACCOUNTS, ETC., OF THE BRITISH MUSEUM. 



Seventy specimens of Corals from the Miocene of Lake 

 Urmi, Persia (some figured and described in tlie Journ. Linn. 

 Soc). Presented by R. T. GUnther, Esq. 



A specimen of Pleurodictyum, from the Devonian rocks of 

 Cornwall. Presented by J. H. Collins, Esq.. F.G.S, 



(g.) Hydrozoa. Twenty- eight Graptolites and other fossils 

 from the Silurian of Ontario, Canada. Presented by Colonel 

 Charles Coote Grant. 



(h.) Protozoa. — A piece of Foraminiferal rock of Car- 

 boniferous age, and live Miocene Foraminifera, from the 

 neighbourhood of Lake Urmi, N.W. Persia. Presented by 

 R. T. Giinther, Esq., m.a. 



C. — Plant^e. 



Nine specimens of Naiadites and other plant-remains from 

 the Rhsetic near Redlands Green, Bristol. Presented by W. 

 H. Wickes, Esq. 



Impressions of Dicotyledonous leaves in (Tertiary ?) rocks 

 with cinnabar ; from the Province of Ise, Japan. Presented 

 by Mr. Kumagusu Minakata. 



11,— By Purchase. A. — Vertebrata. 



1. Mammalia. — A series of seventy Mammalian fossils 

 from the Santa Cruz Beds, Patagonia, including remains of 

 Astropotherium, Toxodon, Nesodon, &c. 



A collection of one hundred and seven Mammalian remains 

 including the genera HyiJogeomys, Fossa, Prointhecus, 

 Nesopithecus, Megaladapis, &c., from Fort Daupin, Mada- 

 gascar. 



Four hundred and ten specimens of Tertiary Mammalia, 

 from the Eocene Phosphorite beds of Caylux. 



A complete skeleton of the small extinct Hippopotamus 

 {H. Lemerlei,) from Madagascar. 



Thirty small jaws of Mammals from the White River, 

 Logan Co., Colorado, and a foot of Bison from the Pleistocene, 

 Colorado. 



One hundred and thirty Mammalian remains from the 

 Tertiary beds at Chubut, Patagonia, as Homalodontotherium, 

 Nesodon, Proter other ium^, Astrapotherium, Dasypus, Hoplo- 

 phorus, &c. 



Upper and lower jaw of Anoplotherium sp. showing milk 

 dentition, from the Eocene of Romansville. 



A jaw of Phascolotherium from the Gt. Oolite of Stones- 

 field, near Oxford. (Figured and described.) (Part of the 

 G. H. Morton Collection.) 



