416 Marsh— Recent Observations on European Dinosaurs. 



Havre. 



The last day at my disposal before sailing for America, I 

 spent in Havre, in the Museum d'Histoire Naturelle, where 

 the director, M. Lennier, showed me many vertebrate fossils of 

 interest, from the well-known localities near the city. Here 

 again, among the fragmentary specimens not yet investigated, I 

 found the bones of another Dinosaur, also one of the Sauro- 

 poda, but considerably larger than the Pleurocmlus at Caen. 

 The remains were very similar to those of Morosaurus, and 

 the horizon was in the Kimmeridge, which is here well defined. 



From Havre, I crossed the Channel to Southampton, and 

 with a parting look at the Wealden cliffs of the Isle of Wight, 

 which have furnished the remains of so many interesting 

 Dinosaurs, I sailed for home. 



Yale University, New Haven, Conn., November 13, 1897. 



