1869.] DAWKmS BRITISH POSTGLACIAL MAMMALS. 203 



Saint Audries.— Mus. Taunton ; Sir Alexander Hood. 



SiTTiNGBOURNE. — Mus. Geol, Survej ; Dr. Grayling. 



Stour Valley. — Brit. Mus. 



Stroud. — Coll. Mr. Lucy (Gloucester). 



Tewkesbury. — On the authority of Prof. Owen (Brit. Foss. Mamm.). 



Thame. — Coll. Mr. T. Coddrington ; Quart. Journ. Geol. Soc. xx. p. 374. 



Thames, Lower. — Brit. Mus. ; Mus. Coll. Surg. 



Thetford. — Quart. Journ. Geol. Soc. xxiii. p. 45. 



TiSBURY. — Brit. Mus, Mus. Geological Survey. 



Tooting. —Mus. Geological Survey. 



Walton. — Brit. Mus. ; Mus. Cambridge, Colchester, Geological Survey, 



Oxford, Geological Soc, and Dr. Bree. 

 Wealden area, — Mus. Folkestone. 

 Weston-super-Mare, — Geological Mag. vol. iii. p. llo. 

 Whitstable, — Brit. Mus. 

 Wilton jail, — Mus, Taunton. 



W^iNDSOR. — Mus. Geological Survey ; Captain Luard, R.E. 

 Woodstock Road Station. — Coll. Mr. James Parker. 

 Worcester Museum, — Worcester. 

 Wyre. — Strickland Coll., Apperley Court. 

 Yarmouth. — Brit. Mus. j ]\Jt. Nash (Yarmouth). 



§ 4. Notes on the Species. — Order Carnivora, family Ursidae, 

 species Ursv.s ferooc. The existence of the Grizzly Bear in Europe 

 was proved by Prof. Busk in 1867*, as well as its probable identity 

 with U.priscus of Dr. Schmerling. It is probably also identical with, 

 the Ursus Leiodensis of the latter author, and with the U. Bourgui- 

 gnati from the Maritime Alps, described by M. Lartet in the Annales 

 des Sciences Naturellesf. 



Order Carnivora, family Mustelidae, species Gulo luscus. The 

 Wolverine, or Glutton, the great pest of the fur-hunters of Siberia 

 and North America, has been determined as a British fossil by Mr. 

 W. A. Sanford. Two of the characteristic canines of that animal 

 have been found in the Mendip caves, in Banwell and Bleadon, and 

 are preserved in the Taunton museum. 



Order Carnivora, family Felidae, species Felis pardus. The ex- 

 istence of the Panther in Britain was proved in 1865, by a canine 

 from Banwell Cave, in the collection of the Earl of Enniskillen, and 

 by two canines, a molar, femur, ulna, and two metatarsals from the 

 Bleadon Cave J. It is most probably identical with the F. antiqua 

 of Cuvier, from the osseous breccia of Cette §. 



Order Carnivora, family Felidae, species Felis leo, var. spelcea. 

 The specific identity of Felis spelcea with the living F. leo of Africa 

 and Asia has been proved in the monograph on the animal published 

 by the Palaeontographical Society !|. 



Order Carnivora, family Felidae, species Felis lynx. We are 

 indebted to Dr. Ransom for the discovery of a lower jaw and skull 



* Quart, Journ. Geol. Soc. vol, xxiii. p. 342. 

 t 5^ Serie, tome viii. p, 157, pi, ix. 

 t See Cat, Taunton Mus. Nos. 616-623. 



§ This was also the opinion of the late Dr, Falconer, expressed verbally 

 to me, II British Pleistocene Mammalia, Parts I., II., Ill; 



