410 Marsh—fRestoration of European Dinosaurs. 
The great majority of Dinosaurian footprints preserved were 
evidently made during ordinary locomotion, although some 
series show evidence of more rapid movement. All those 
referred to carnivorous Dinosaurs are bipedal, and this is true 
of the footprints of many herbivorous forms. 
FIGURE 1.—Sketch of Compsognathus longipes, Wagner. One-seventh natural 
size. (After Huxley.) 
In the present restoration of Compsognathus (Plate V), I 
have tried to represent the animal as walking, in a characteristic 
position true to life. 
Scelidosaurus. (Plate VI.) 
The second of these restorations is that of Scelzdosaurus 
Harrisoni, of Owen, shown natural size in the diagram. 
This reptile was an herbivorous Dinosaur of moderate size, 
related to Stegosaurus, and was its predecessor from a lower 
geological horizon in England. ‘This restoration is essentially 
based upon the original description and figures of Owen (Pale- 
ontographical Society, 1861). These have been supplemented 
by my own notes and sketches, made during examinations of 
the type specimen, now in the British Museum. 
Scelidosaurus is a near relative, as it were, of one of our 
American forms, Stegosaurus, now represented by so many 
specimens that we know the skull, skeleton, and dermal armor, 
with much certainty. The English form known as Omosau- 
rus is still more nearly allied to Stegosaurus, perhaps identical. 
A restoration of the skeleton of Scel¢dosaurus, by Dr. 
Henry Woodward, will be found in the British Museum Guide 
to Geology and Paleontology, 1890, p. 19. The missing parts 
are restored from Jguanodon, and the animal is represented 
as bipedal, as in that genus. 
