SYSTEMATIC SYNOPSIS OF FOSSIL BIBDS. 827 



lehth/yornis and Archoeopteryx, shows greater diversity from one another than that existing 

 among all known birds of later geologic and of the present epoch. 



The first remains of this now famous species were found by Prof. Marsh in November, 

 1870, in the yeUow chalk of the Pteranodon beds, near the Smoky Hill river in Kansas. The 

 type specimen was found in July, 1871, on the south bank of the same river, about twenty 

 miles east of Fort Wallace, imbedded in gray calcareous shale. Many other remains have 

 also been collected, representing in all some forty diflferent individuals, all from the same 

 geologic horizon in Western Kansas, and most of them near the locality of the original ones. 

 They are aU preserved in the Museum of Yale College. 



31. HESPEBORNIS CBASSIPES. 



Lestornis crassipes, Marsh, Am. Joum. Sci., xi, June, 1876, p. 509. 



Hesperornis crassipes, Marsh, Odont., 1880, p. 196, figg. 40 a-d, pU. vii, xvii. 



Based upon a nearly complete skeleton from the yellow chalk of Western Kansas, indicat- 

 ing a bird considerably larger than H. regalis, and one that may prove to be generically 

 distinct. Deposited in the Yale Museum. 



32. HESPEBOBNIS GBACILIS. 



Hesperornis gracilis, Marsh, Am. Joum. Sci., xi, June, 1876, p. 510. — Id., Odont, 1880, 

 pp. 99, 197. 



A third species, from the same horizon and locality, represented by two specimens, one of 

 them a nearly complete skeleton. Deposited in the Yale Museum. 

 S3. ICHTHYOENIS DISPAR. 



Ichfhyornis dispar. Marsh, Am. Journ. Sci., iv, Oct., 1872, p. 344. — Id., ibid., v, Feb., 

 1873, p. 161. — Id., ibid.. Mar., 1873, p. 230. — Coues, Key, 1872, p. 350. — Owen, Journ. 

 Geol. Soo. Lond., xxxix, 1873, p. 530.— WooDW., Pop. Sci. Eev., Oct., 1875, p. 348.— Marsh, 

 Am. Nat., ix, Dec, 1875, p. 635. —Id., G-eol. Mag., iii, 1876, p. 49. — Huxl., Pop. Sci. 

 Monthly, x, 1876, pp. 215-318. — Marsh, Joum. de ZooL, iv, 1875, p. 494, pi. xv ; vi, 1877, 

 p. 385. — Id., Odont., 1880, pp. 119-183, 197, pll. xxi-xxvi. 



This remarkable bird, forming a type of the whole group Odontotorma (p. 237) of Odont- 

 ornifhes, with general characters of the skeleton like those of ordinary birds, yet with socketed 

 teeth and biconcave vertebrae, was discovered in 1872 near the Solomon river in Northwestern 

 Kansas, in the Pteranodon beds of the middle Cretaceous. It was about as large as a pigeon. 

 The remains of about nine individuals, all from the same region, are preserved in the Museum 

 at Yale College. 



34. ICHTHYOBNIS AGILIS. 



Graeulavus agilis. Marsh, Am. Joum. Sci., v. Mar., 1873, p. 330. 



Ichfhyornis agilis, Marsh, Odont., 1880, p. 197. 



From the same horizon in Western Kansas, on Butte Creek, a tributary of the Smoky 

 Hill river, where discovered in October, 1873. The remains are preserved in the Yale College 

 Museum. 



35. ICHTHYOENIS ANCEPS. 



Graeulavus anceps, Marsh, Am. Joum. Sci., iii. May, 1873, p. 364. — Coues, Key, 

 1873, p. 350. — Marsh, Am. Journ. Sci., v, Mar., 1873, p. 329. —Id., Odont., 1880, pp. 

 124, 198. 



Resembling I. dispa/r, but with slenderer jaws and more teeth. The right lower jaw of 

 the type specimen of I. dAspair shows twenty-one distinct sockets. Discovered in November, 

 1870, in the gray shale of the middle Cretaceous, on the north fork of the Smoky Hill river in 

 western Kansas, where other specimens have since been found. All are preserved at Yale. 



36. ICHTHYOENIS LENTUS. 



Graeulavus Imtus, Marsh, Am. Joum. Sci., xiv, Sept., 1877, p. 353. 

 Ichthyornis lentus, Marsh, Odont., 1880, p. 198. 



