42 ANOMODONTIA. 



R. 1028. Cast of the imperfect left side of the occipital region. The 

 original was obtained from the Panchet stage of the 

 Lower Gondwana system at Panchet, near Raniganj, 

 Bengal; and is preserved in the Indian Museum, Calcutta. 

 It is figured by the writer in the ' Palasontologia Indiea,' 

 ser. 4, vol. i. pt. iii. pi. i. fig. 2. In the figure the upper 

 part of the bone should have been inclined towards the 

 middle line, thus narrowing the upper part of the foramen 

 magnum, and the notch for the descending plate of the 

 interparietal ; an amended restoration is given in fig. 8. 

 In the parietal region of a cranium figured by Huxley, op. 

 cit. pt. i. pi. i. fig. 1, there is an azygous bone in advance 

 of the parietal foramen, as in P. murrayi. 



Made in the Museum, 1889. 



R. 1026 a. Cast of the imperfect glenoidal extremity of the right 

 scapula. The original was obtained from Panchet, and is 

 preserved in the Indian Museum. It is figured by the 

 writer in the ' Palseontologia Indiea,' ser. 4, vol. i. pt. iii. 

 pi. i. fig. 5. This specimen agrees in size with the scapula 

 of the African pectoral girdle represented in fig. 2, and if, 

 as is probable, that specimen belongs to P. elective, the 

 present one would agree in relative size with the occiput 

 above mentioned. Made in the Museum, 1889. 



R. 1026 b. Cast of the imperfect right scapula. The original was 

 obtained from Panchet, and is preserved in the Indian 

 Museum. It is figured by Huxley, op. cit. pt. i. pi. v. 

 fig. 5, as a Saurian scapula, and referred by the present 

 writer, op. cit. pt. iii. p. 8, to the Dicynodonts. This 

 specimen, which is much smaller than the preceding, is 

 also figured by the writer in the ' Proc. Zool. Soc.' 1889, 

 pi. lv. fig. 2, and in the ' Rec. Geol. Surv. Ind.' vol. xxiii. 

 pt. i. (from which fig. 9 is reproduced), in conjunction with 

 the next specimen. Made in the Museum, 1889. 



R. 1026 C. Cast of the right coracoid. The original was obtained 

 with the preceding, and is in the Indian Museum. It is 

 figured by the writer in the ' Pal. Ind.' op. cit. pi. ii. fig. 8, 

 from the ventral aspect, and provisionally referred to the 

 Dinosaurian genus Epicampodon (Ancistrodon). It is 

 refigured in the ' Iiec. Geol. Surv. Ind.' vol. xxiii. pt. i., in 

 conjunction with the scapula and a restoration of the pre- 

 coracoid, the woodcut being reproduced in fig. 9. This 



