674 REY. 0. FISHER ON A MAMMALIFEROUS 
(6.) 6 portions of antlers, 1 fragment of mandible, 
(7.) 1 brow-antler, 1 base and burr, | tibia. 
(8.) 1 astragalus and broken end of tibia, probably of a young animal. It is 
larger than Roebuck, but much smaller than Red Deer. 
(9.) 1 fragment of skull, which fell to pieces, 1 horn-core preserved (3 feet long 
astragali, 1 complete hind limb, 5 metatarsals, 4 portions of scapula, 
9 fragmentary or complete humeri, 1 radius and ulna attached, 10 por- 
tions of radii, 4 ulnz (olecranon portions), 9 metacarpals (belonging to 
two or three species of Bos), 26 detached boues of teet. 
(10.) 4 horn-cores. (Probably some of the bones in the last list may belong 
to Bison.) 
(11.) At least two individuals; one probably entire. 1 skull (fragments of), 
4 pieces of jaws, 15 molars and a few fragments, 10 canines (or pieces of), 
9 incisors (or pieces of), 24 vertebrx, several caudal belonging to a series, 
2 pelves (portions of), 2 kneecaps, 4 femora (portions of), 2 tibize, 2 cal- 
canea, | astragalus, 4 humeri (or portiors of), 2 radius and ulna, 8 detached 
bones of feet. 
(12.) Probably five individuals. 19 molar teeth and some fragments, 1 back of 
skull, 3 vertebree, 1 fragment of femur, 1 kneecap, | tibia, 6 portions of 
humerus, 5 radii, 3 ulnz, 13 detached bones of feet. 
(13.) 4 molars of two individuals. 
(14.) 1 portion of a molar was found, which the author saw, and believed to 
have belonged to HL. primigenius. It fell to pieces. 
There are likewise a few bones of birds hitherto undetermined. 
There is no river-deposit mentioned in Prof. Dawkins’s paper on 
British Postglacial mammals*, which is credited with so large a 
number of species, except Fisherton, where the number is likewise 
fourteen. The assemblage, however, is not the same. 
The specimens have been compared at the University Museum of 
Comparative Anatomy, and determined by Mr. Tawney, who has 
labelled and catalogued the whole of them. There is a fine skull of 
Hycena, which would have been perfect had it not been broken off 
by the pickaxe just behind the canines; it belonged to an adult, 
but not aged, individual. A magnificent pair of horn-cores of the 
Bos primigenius were found, with the forehead attached ; but unfor- 
tunately the horn-cores were so decayed and permeated with mud 
that only one of them could be saved. The most remarkable fact 
observed was the abundance of the bones and teeth of the Hippo- 
potamus, also abundant at the ‘‘Green.” Some very fine specimens 
of the tusks have been, with much labour, built up out of the very 
numerous fragments into which they fell when removed. Four teeth 
of Hlephas antiquus had been previously obtained in another pit in 
the same field, at a short distance up the course of the old stream, 
and were presented to the Museum by Mr. F. W. Smith. Mr. Griffith 
also gave his specimens. I saw only one tooth of Elephant in our 
working; it was so decayed that it could not be brought home. I 
believe it belonged to L. primigenius. Had I known at the time that 
the other specimens belonged to HZ. antiquus I should have examined 
it more closely. 
Only one worked flint was found. It is of an oval form, extremely 
small, being about an inch and a half long by an inch wide. It is 
* Quart. Journ, Geol. Soc. vol. xxv. p. 192. 
