t PLEISTOCENE MAMMALTA. 
Burrington Combe, Somerset (Dawkins,’ 1864, wolf, fox), are of Prehistoric, not 
Pleistocene remains. 
More recent are Newton’s’? account (1894) of the fauna of the Ightham fissure 
near Maidstone, in which the Arctic fox was again met with, and Newton and 
Arnold Bemrose’s* account (1905) of the Hoe Grange Cave, Derbyshire, where 
scanty remains of the wolf and common fox were found. 
More comprehensive records are those of Falconer* (1868), who showed that 
bones of both wolf and fox had been recognised in all eight of the Gower caves, 
and Dawkins? (1869), who, in his well-known paper on the ‘ Distribution of the 
British Post-Glacial Mammals,’ gives a long list of localities for canine bones. 
Much additional information with regard to both the Pleistocene and Pre- 
historic Canidz is contained in Dawkins and Sanford’s introduction to their 
Memoirs on the British Pleistocene Mammalia (Paleontographical Society, 1866). 
Harting’s ‘ Extinct British Animals,’ published in 1880, though chiefly concerned 
with the wolf during the historic period, has some account of its occurrence in 
Britain in Pleistocene and Prehistoric times, and adds some further localities® to 
Dawkins’ list. Pennington’s ‘ Notes on the Barrows and Bone Caves of Derby- 
shire’ (1877), though treating the subject in a more or less popular fashion, contains 
some further information. 
During the middle and latter part of the last century, too, the question of the 
mutual relationship of the Canide was not left unconsidered, being discussed by 
Riitimeyer ? (1862), Jeitteles* (1872 and 1877), and Bourguignat’ (1875), while 
more recently the subject has been taken up by Huxley !° (1880), Woldrich " (1881 
and 1886), Lydekker ” (1884), von Pelzeln (1886), Wileckens™* (1886), Nehring * 
(1888), Boule” (1889), Vieira” (1894), Gaudry and Boule’ (1892), Studer’ (1902) 
' «Proc. Somerset. Arch. and Nat. Hist. Soc.,’ xii, pp. 161-—176. 
2 «Quart. Journ. Geol. Soc.,’ 1, pp. 201—203. 
* Thid., lxi, pp. 49 and 50. 4 «Pal. Mem.,’ ii, p. 525. 
» “Quart. Journ. Geol. Soc.,’ xxv, p. 192. 
© Op, cit.,.p. 118) 
7 «Untersuchung der Tierreste aus Pfahlbauten der Schweiz’ (1862). 
8 *Mittheil. d. anthropol. Gesell. in Wien,’ ii, p. 169 (1872), and ‘Die Stammvater unserer 
Hunderassen’ (1877). 
9 «Ann. des Sciences Géol.,’ vi, p. 33. 
10 «Proce. Zool. Soc.,’ 1880, pp. 238—288, 
"* Mittheil. der anthropol. Gesell. in Wien’ (1881), xi, and ‘ Anz. Akad. Wien’ (1886), p. 12. 
2 «Paleont. Indica,’ ser. 10, vol. ii, p. 240. 13 ¢ Zool. Jahrbuch,’ i, pp. 225—240. 
4 «Biol. Centralbl.,’ v, pp. 719 and 751. 
15 * Naturwissenschaft. Wochenschrift,’ ii. 
16 «Comptes Rend.,’ eviii, p. 201. 7 « Ann. Sci. Nat. Porto,’ i, p. 109. 
18 «Mat. pour I’Hist. des Temps quatern.,’ fase. iv, pp. 123—129. 
19 « Abh. schweiz. pal. Ges.,’ xxviil, art. 1 (1902). 
