184 Notice of a Visit to the Valley of Kashmir. [March, 



430 — 439 Radius, upper extremity. 

 440 — 449 , lower extremity. 



450 , with carpal and part of metacarpal. 



451 , perfect, with part of ulua, fragments, 452. 



4.i3 Calitus. 

 454 — 46*6 Carpal and tarsal bones. 

 467 — 527 Metacarpal and metatarsal bones. 

 528 — 537 Astragalus. 

 538 — 551 Calcaneus, .very large. 

 552 — 562 Phalanges. 



563 Ribs, fragment of. 



Hyaena. 



600 Upper jaw, in good preservation. 



601 Canine and 1st molar of do. 



602 Lower jaw, entire, and fragment, 603. 



604 Cranium. 



605 Three molars of some canine' animal. 



606 Metatarsal bones of some carnivorous animal. 



Saurian. 



700 — 717 Vertebrae of Saurian reptiles. 



718 Cranium of Gharial. 



719 — 724 Plates of crocodilidse. 



Besides about 120 fragments not identified, received with the second 

 dispatch ; the whole of the first donation unregistered, and some 

 gigantic testudinous plates, presented by Col. Colvin personally while 

 in Calcutta. 



Gigantic Elk, (presented by Mr. Conductor W. Dawe,) found in 

 the Ganawer Khal, near the Haripdl branch of the Sombe river. 



D 3 4 Portions of the antler. 



D 5 Axis of second cervical vertebra. 



D 6 Cervical vertebra of do. 



Buffalo ? presented by the same. 



D 1 Head of bos or buffalo with one horn. 



D 2 Piece of horn, supposed to belong to the same. 



V. — Notice of a Visit to the Valley of Kashmir in 1836. By the Baron 



Hugel. 

 [Read on the 6th April.] 

 On my way to Bombay to embark for Europe, I take the liberty of 

 addressing you a few lines, requesting your doing with them what you 

 think best: they relate to my journey to Kashmir. I was in hopes 

 of being able to send you a more elaborate memoir, but my time is 

 very much limited, that I am afraid of postponement, and hasten rather 

 to offer you a few notes as they were collected. I understand that 

 Mr. Jacquemont's travels are now published. I think therefore that 

 it may be of some interest to the Indian reading public, to have before 

 it some observations, not influenced by the above mentioned work, 

 made by a traveller a few years later, to compare them together. As 



