19 



79. The last true molar of the right side, upper jaw, of a Wolf. 



80. Two false molar teeth of the left side, lower jaw, of a Wolf. 



81. The sectorial tooth, of the left side, lower jaw, of a Wolf. 



82. The sectorial tooth, of the right side, lower jaw, of a Wolf. 



83. Three fractured cervical vertebrae of a Wolf. 



84. A fractured dorsal vertebra of a Wolf. 



85. A fractured lumbar vertebra of a Wolf. 



86. The left humerus, wanting the proximal extremity, of a Wolf. 

 87- The shaft of the right humerus of a Wolf. 



88. The proximal end of the right ulna of a Wolf. 



89. The proximal part of the left ulna of a Wolf. 



90. The proximal part of the right ulna of a Wolf ; it has been gnawed by 



some small quadruped. 



This specimen is alluded to in the following passage from the ' Reli- 

 quieeDiluvianse' of Dr. Buckland: — "The bones (at Oreston) appeared to 

 us to have been washed down from above at the same time with the mud 

 and fragments of limestone, through which they are dispersed, and to have 

 been lodged wherever there was a ledge or cavity sufficiently capacious to 

 receive them; they were entirely without order, and not in entire skeletons ; 

 occasionally fractured, but not rolled ; apparently drifted, but to a short 

 distance from the spot in which the animals died ; they seem to agree in 

 all their circumstances with the osseous breccia of Gibraltar, excepting- 

 the accident of their being less firmly cemented by stalagmitic infiltra- 

 tions through their earthy matrix, and consequently being more decayed ; 

 they do not appear, like those of Kirkdale, to bear the marks of having 

 been gnawed or fractured by the teeth of Hyaenas, nor is there any 

 reason to believe them to have been introduced by the agency of these 

 animals. The only marks I have seen on them were those pointed out 

 to me by Mr. Clift, of nibbling by the incisor and canine teeth of an 

 animal of the size of a weasel, showing distinctly the different effect of 

 each individual tooth on the ulna of a wolf and the tibia of a horse." p. 73. 



91. The distal portion of the right radius of a Wolf. 



