The Gamivora — Machcerodus, etc. 



Table-case, 

 No. 2, Pier- 

 case, No. 3. 



Fig. 3.— Upper and outer aspects of the right ramus of the mandible of Viverra 

 HastiiigiiK (Davies) ; Upper Eocene, Hordwell, Hampshire. 



of the canine teeth, and also 

 for its wide geographical dis- 

 tribution. These remains Lave 

 been met with in Kent's Cavern, 

 Torquay, in Ores well Crag 

 Caves. Derbyshire, in the Nor- 

 folk Forest-bed, in the Miocene 

 Tertiary deposits of Eppelsheim 

 in Germany, the Auvergne in 

 France, the Val d'Arno in 

 Italy, the Pampas deposits and 

 the bone-caves of South 

 America, and the Lower Plio- 

 cene freshwater sandstones of 

 the Siwalik Hills in India. 



The 'Machcerodus is now quite 

 extinct. 



Remains of Hycena eximia 

 from Samos and Pikermi, of 

 Hycenudon, Pterodon, etc., from 

 the Lower Tertiaries of France, are placed in these cases. Here 

 also are exhibited various early representatives of tbe Carnivora, 



Fig. 4. — Lateral aspect of skull of tbe 

 "Great Sabre-toothed Tiger. "Machcero- 

 dus neogwas (Lund) ; from the Newer 

 Tertiary deposits^of South America. 



Fig. 5.— The right upper carnassial tooth of Hi/ana striata (Zimm.) : from the Suffolk 

 crag (a, outer: b, oral aspect of tooth). 



